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  <title>History of the Christian Church, Volume I: Apostolic Christianity. A.D. 1-100.</title>
  <contributor role="x-Markup">Wendy Huang</contributor>
  <creator subType="ccel" role="aut">schaff</creator>
  <creator subType="file-as" role="aut">Schaff, Philip (1819-1893)</creator>
  <creator subType="short-form" role="aut">Philip Schaff</creator>
  <subject subType="ccel">All; History; </subject>
  <subject subType="LCCN">BR145.S3 1882-1910</subject>
  <subject subType="lcsh1">Christianity</subject>
  <subject subType="lcsh2">History</subject>
  <date type="ISO" subType="Created">2002-11-26</date>
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<div type="x-div1" divTitle="History of the Christian Church" n="i" osisID="i">

<p subType="x-MsoHeading7" osisID="i.p1">HISTORY</p>

<p osisID="i.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="i.p3"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading7" osisID="i.p4">of the</p>

<p osisID="i.p5"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="i.p6"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading7" osisID="i.p7">CHRISTIAN CHURCH<note osisID="edn1"><p subType="x-endnote" osisID="i.p8"> Schaff,
Philip, History of the Christian Church, (Oak Harbor, WA: Logos
Research Systems, Inc.) 1997. This material has been carefully
compared, corrected¸ and emended (according to the 1910
edition of Charles Scribner's Sons) by The Electronic Bible Society,
Dallas, TX, 1998.</p></note></p>

<p osisID="i.p9"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="i.p10"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading7" osisID="i.p11">by</p>

<p osisID="i.p12"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading7" osisID="i.p13">PHILIP SCHAFF</p>

<p osisID="i.p14"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="i.p15"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-c15" osisID="i.p16">Christianus sum.</p>

<p subType="x-c15" osisID="i.p17">Christiani nihil a me alienum
puto</p>

<p osisID="i.p18"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="i.p19"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="i.p20">VOLUME I</p>

<p osisID="i.p21"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="i.p22">APOSTOLIC CHRISTIAINITY</p>

<p osisID="i.p23"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="i.p24">a.d.
1–100.</p>

<p osisID="i.p25"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="i.p26"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="i.p27">
————</p>


<div type="x-div2" divTitle="Preface to the Revised Edition" n="i" osisID="i.i">

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="i.i.p1">PREFACE TO THE REVISED EDITION</p>

<p osisID="i.i.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PFirst" osisID="i.i.p3">As I appear before the public with a new edition of
my Church History, I feel more than ever the difficulty and
responsibility of a task which is well worthy to occupy the whole time
and strength of a long life, and which carries in it its own rich
reward. The true historian of Christianity is yet to come. But short as
I have fallen of my own ideal, I have done my best, and shall rejoice
if my efforts stimulate others to better and more enduring work.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.i.p4">History should be written from the original
sources of friend and foe, in the spirit of truth and love, "sine ira
et studio," "with malice towards none, and charity for all," in clear,
fresh, vigorous style, under the guidance of the twin parables of the
mustard seed and leaven, as a book of life for instruction, correction,
encouragement, as the best exposition and vindication of Christianity.
The great and good Neander, "the father of Church
History"—first an Israelite without guile hoping for
the Messiah, then a Platonist longing for the realization of his ideal
of righteousness, last a Christian in head and
heart—made such a history his life-work, but before
reaching the Reformation he was interrupted by sickness, and said to
his faithful sister: "Hannchen, I am weary; let us go home; good
night!" And thus he fell gently asleep, like a child, to awake in the
land where all problems of history are solved.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.i.p5">When, after a long interruption caused by a change
of professional duties and literary labors, I returned to the favorite
studies of my youth, I felt the necessity, before continuing the
History to more recent times, of subjecting the first volume to a
thorough revision, in order to bring it up to the present state of
investigation. We live in a restless and stirring age of discovery,
criticism, and reconstruction. During the thirty years which have
elapsed since the publication of my separate "History of the Apostolic
Church," there has been an incessant activity in this field, not only
in Germany, the great workshop of critical research, but in all other
Protestant countries. Almost every inch of ground has been disputed and
defended with a degree of learning, acumen, and skill such as were
never spent before on the solution of historical problems.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.i.p6">In this process of reconstruction the first volume
has been more than doubled in size and grown into two volumes. The
first embraces Apostolic, the second post-Apostolic or ante-Nicene
Christianity. The first volume is larger than my separate "History of
the Apostolic Church," but differs from it in that it is chiefly
devoted to the theology and literature, the other to the mission work
and spiritual life of that period. I have studiously avoided repetition
and seldom looked into the older book. On two points I have changed my
opinion—the second Roman captivity of Paul (which I am
disposed to admit in the interest of the Pastoral Epistles), and the
date of the Apocalypse (which I now assign, with the majority of modern
critics, to the year 68 or 69 instead of 95, as before).<note osisID="edn2"><p osisID="i.i.p7"> My "History of the
Apostolic Church" (which bears a relation to my "History of the
Christian Church," similar to that which Neander’s
"History of the Planting and Training of the Christian Church by the
Apostles" bears to his "General History of the Christian Religion and
Church") appeared in German at Mercersburg, Pa., 1851, then in a
revised edition, Leipzig, 1854, in an English translation by the late
Dr. Yeomans, New York, 1853, at Edinburg, 1854 (in 2 vols.), and
several times since without change. Should there be a demand for a new
edition, I intend to make a number of improvements, which are ready in
manuscript, especially in the General Introduction, which covers 134
pages. The first volume of my Church History (from A. D. 1 to 311) was
first published in New York, 1858, (and in German at Leipzig, 1867);
but when I began the revision, I withdrew it from sale. The Apostolic
age there occupies only 140, the whole volume 535 pages.</p></note></p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.i.p8">I express my deep obligation to my friend, Dr.
Ezra Abbot, a scholar of rare learning and microscopic accuracy, for
his kind and valuable assistance in reading the proof and suggesting
improvements.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.i.p9">The second volume, likewise thoroughly revised and
partly rewritten, is in the hands of the printer; the third requires a
few changes. Two new volumes, one on the History of Mediaeval
Christianity, and one on the Reformation (to the Westphalian Treaty and
the Westminster Assembly, 1648), are in an advanced stage of
preparation.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.i.p10">May the work in this remodelled shape find as kind
and indulgent readers as when it first appeared. My highest ambition in
this sceptical age is to strengthen the immovable historical
foundations of Christianity and its victory over the world.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.i.p11">Philip Schaff</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.i.p12">Union Theological Seminary, New York,</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.i.p13">October,1882</p>

</div>


<div type="x-div2" divTitle="From the Preface to the First Edition" n="ii" osisID="i.ii">

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="i.ii.p1">FROM THE PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION</p>

<p osisID="i.ii.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-c17" osisID="i.ii.p3">———————————</p>

<p osisID="i.ii.p4"><milestone type="x-br"/></p>
<p osisID="i.ii.p5"><milestone type="x-br"/></p>
<p subType="x-PFirst" osisID="i.ii.p6">Encouraged by the favorable reception of my "History
of the Apostolic Church," I now offer to the public a History of the
Primitive Church from the birth of Christ to the reign of Constantine,
as an independent and complete work in itself, and at the same time as
the first volume of a general history of Christianity, which I hope,
with the help of God, to bring down to the present age.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.ii.p7">The church of the first three centuries, or the
ante-Nicene age, possesses a peculiar interest for Christians of all
denominations, and has often been separately treated, by Eusebius,
Mosheim, Milman, Kaye, Baur, Hagenbach, and other distinguished
historians. It is the daughter of Apostolic Christianity, which itself
constitutes the first and by far the most important chapter in its
history, and the common mother of Catholicism and Protestantism, though
materially differing from both. It presents a state of primitive
simplicity and purity unsullied by contact with the secular power, but
with this also, the fundamental forms of heresy and corruption, which
reappear from time to time under new names and aspects, but must serve,
in the overruling providence of God, to promote the cause of truth and
righteousness. It is the heroic age of the church, and unfolds before
us the sublime spectacle of our holy religion in intellectual and moral
conflict with the combined superstition, policy, and wisdom of ancient
Judaism and Paganism; yet growing in persecution, conquering in death,
and amidst the severest trials giving birth to principles and
institutions which, in more matured form, still control the greater
part of Christendom.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.ii.p8">Without the least disposition to detract from the
merits of my numerous predecessors, to several of whom I feel deeply
indebted, I have reason to hope that this new attempt at a historical
reproduction of ancient Christianity will meet a want in our
theological literature and commend itself, both by its spirit and
method, and by presenting with the author’s own labors
the results of the latest German and English research, to the
respectful attention of the American student. Having no sectarian ends
to serve, I have confined myself to the duty of a
witness—to tell the truth, the whole truth, and
nothing but the truth; always remembering, however, that history has a
soul as well as a body, and that the ruling ideas and general
principles must be represented no less than the outward facts and
dates. A church history without the life of Christ glowing through its
pages could give us at best only the picture of a temple stately and
imposing from without, but vacant and dreary within, a mummy in praying
posture perhaps and covered with trophies, but withered and unclean:
such a history is not worth the trouble of writing or reading. Let the
dead bury their dead; we prefer to live among the living, and to record
the immortal thoughts and deeds of Christ in and through his people,
rather than dwell upon the outer hulls, the trifling accidents and
temporary scaffolding of history, or give too much prominence to Satan
and his infernal tribe, whose works Christ came to destroy.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.ii.p9">The account of the apostolic period, which forms
the divine-human basis of the whole structure of history, or the
ever-living fountain of the unbroken stream of the church, is here
necessarily short and not intended to supersede my larger work,
although it presents more than a mere summary of it, and views the
subject in part under new aspects. For the history of the second
period, which constitutes the body of this volume, large use has been
made of the new sources of information recently brought to light, such
as the Syriac and Armenian Ignatius, and especially the Philosophoumena
of Hippolytus. The bold and searching criticism of modern German
historians as applied to the apostolic and post-apostolic literature,
though often arbitrary and untenable in its results, has nevertheless
done good service by removing old prejudices, placing many things in a
new light, and conducing to a comprehensive and organic view of the
living process and gradual growth of ancient Christianity in its
distinctive character, both in its unity with, and difference from, the
preceding age of the apostles and the succeeding systems of Catholicism
and Protestantism.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.ii.p10">And now I commit this work to the great Head of
the church with the prayer that, under his blessing, it may aid in
promoting a correct knowledge of his heavenly kingdom on earth, and in
setting forth its history as a book if life, a storehouse of wisdom and
piety, and surest test of his own promise to his people: "Lo, I am with
you alway, even unto the end of the world."</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.ii.p11">P. S.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.ii.p12">Theological Seminary,
Mercersburg, Pennsylvania,</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.ii.p13">November, 8, 1858</p>

<p osisID="i.ii.p14"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

</div>


<div type="x-div2" divTitle="Preface to the Third Revision" n="iii" osisID="i.iii">

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="i.iii.p1">PREFACE TO THIRD REVISION</p>

<p osisID="i.iii.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-Center" osisID="i.iii.p3">———————————</p>

<p osisID="i.iii.p4"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PFirst" osisID="i.iii.p5">The continued demand for my Church History lays upon
me the grateful duty of keeping it abreast of the times. I have,
therefore, submitted this and the other volumes (especially the second)
to another revision and brought the literature down to the latest date,
as the reader will see by glancing at pages 2, 35, 45,
51–53, 193, 411, 484, 569, 570, etc. The changes have
been effected by omissions and condensations, without enlarging the
size. The second volume is now passing through the fifth edition, and
the other volumes will follow rapidly.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.iii.p6">This is my last revision. If any further
improvements should be necessary during my lifetime, I shall add them
in a separate appendix.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.iii.p7">I feel under great obligation to the reading
public which enables me to perfect my work. The interest in Church
History is steadily increasing in our theological schools and among the
rising generation of scholars, and promises good results for the
advancement of our common Christianity.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.iii.p8">The Author</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.iii.p9">New York, January, 1890.</p>

<p osisID="i.iii.p10"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

</div>


<div type="x-div2" divTitle="Contents" n="iv" osisID="i.iv">

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="i.iv.p1">CONTENTS</p>

<p osisID="i.iv.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/></p>




<p osisID="i.iv.p162"><milestone type="x-br"/></p>

</div>


<div type="x-div2" divTitle="Addenda" n="v" osisID="i.v">

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="i.v.p1">ADDENDA</p>

<p osisID="i.v.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<title type="x-h4" subType="x-Center" osisID="i.v.p2.2">(Fifth Edition.)</title>

<p osisID="i.v.p3"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="i.v.p4"><milestone type="x-br"/></p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.p5">Since the third revision of this volume in 1889,
the following works deserving notice have appeared till September,
1893. (P. S.)</p>

<p osisID="i.v.p6"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.p7">Page 2. After "Nirschl" add:</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="i.v.p8">E. Bernheim Lehrbuch der historischen Methode. Mit Nachweis der wichtigsten
Quellen und Hilfsmittel zum Studium der Geschichte. Leipzig,
1889.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="i.v.p9">Edward Bratke: Wegweiser zur Quellen- und Literaturkunde der
Kirchengeschichte. Gotha, 1890 (282 pp.).</p>

<p subType="x-Norm-Center" osisID="i.v.p10">Page 35, line 9:</p>

<p subType="x-c22" osisID="i.v.p11">H. Brueck (Mainz, 5th ed., 1890).</p>

<p subType="x-Norm-Center" osisID="i.v.p12">Page 45:</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="i.v.p13">Of the Church History of Kurtz (who died at Marburg, 1890), an 11th revised edition
appeared in 1891.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="i.v.p14">Wilhelm Moeller (d. at
Kiel, 1891): Lehrbuch der
Kirchengeschichte. Freiburg, 1891. 2 vols., down to the
Reformation. Vol. III. to be added by Kawerau. Vol. I. translated by
Rutherford. London, 1892.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="i.v.p15">Karl Mueller (Professor in
Breslau): Kirchengeschichte. Freiburg,
1892. A second volume will complete the work. An excellent manual from
the school of Ritschl-Harnack.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="i.v.p16">Harnack’s
large Lehrbuch der Dogmengeschichte was
completed in 1890 in 3 vols. Of his Grundriss, a 2d ed. appeared in
1893 (386 pp.); translated by Edwin K. Mitchell, of Hartford, Conn.:
Outlines of the History of Dogma. New York, 1893.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="i.v.p17">Friedrich Loofs (Professor
of Church History in Halle, of the Ritschl-Harnack school): Leitfaden zum Studium der Dogmengeschichte. Halle,
1889; 3d ed., 1893.</p>

<p subType="x-Norm-Center" osisID="i.v.p18">Page 51. After "Schaff "add:</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="i.v.p19">5th revision, 1889–93, 7 vols.
(including vol. v., which is in press). Page 51. After "Fisher"
add:</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="i.v.p20">John Fletcher Hurst (Bishop
of the Methodist Episcopal Church): Short History of the Christian
Church. New York, 1893.</p>

<p subType="x-Norm-Center" osisID="i.v.p21">Page 61. After "Kittel "add:</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="i.v.p22">Franz Delitzsch (d. 1890):
Messianische Weissagungen in geschichtlicher
Folge. Leipzig, 1890. His last work. Translated by Sam. Ives
Curtiss (of Chicago), Edinb. and New York, 1892.</p>

<p subType="x-Norm-Center" osisID="i.v.p23">Page 97:</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="i.v.p24">Samuel J. Andrews: Life
of our Lord. "A new and wholly revised edition." New York, 1891
(651 pp.). With maps and illustrations. Maintains the quadripaschal
theory. Modest, reverent, accurate, devoted chiefly to the
chronological and topographical relations.</p>

<p subType="x-Norm-Center" osisID="i.v.p25">Page 183 add:</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="i.v.p26">On the Apocryphal Traditions of Christ, comp.
throughout</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="i.v.p27">Alfred Resch: Agrapha. Aussercanonische Evangelienfragmente gesammelt und
untersucht. With an appendix of Harnack on the Gospel Fragment of Tajjum. Leipzig, 1889
(520 pp.). By far the most complete and critical work on the
extra-canonical sayings of our Lord, of which he collects and examines
63 (see p. 80), including many doubtful ones, e.g., the much-discussed
passage of the Didache (I. 6) on the sweating of aloes.</p>

<p subType="x-Norm-Center" osisID="i.v.p28">Page 247:</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="i.v.p29">Abbé Constant
Fouard: Saint Peter and the First Years of Christianity.
Translated from the second French edition with the
author’s sanction, by George F. X. Griffith. With an
Introduction by Cardinal Gibbons. New York and London, 1892 (pp. xxvi,
422). The most learned work in favor of the traditional Roman theory of
a twenty-five years’ pontificate of Peter in Rome from
42 to 67.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="i.v.p30">The apocryphal literature of Peter has
received an important addition by the discovery of fragments of the
Greek Gospel and Apocalypse of Peter in a tomb at Akhmim in Egypt. See
Harnack’s ed. of the Greek text with a German
translation and commentary, Berlin, 1892 (revised, 1893);
Zahn’s edition and discussion, Leipzig, 1893; and O.
von Gebhardt’s facsimile ed., Leipzig, 1893; also the
English translation by J. Rendel Harris, London, 1893.</p>

<p subType="x-Norm-Center" osisID="i.v.p31">Page 284. Add to lit. on the life of Paul:</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="i.v.p32">W. H. Ramsey (Professor of
Humanity in the University of Aberdeen): The Church in the Roman
Empire before a.d. 170. With Maps and
Illustrations. London and New York, 1893 (494 pp.). An important work,
for which the author received a gold medal from Pope Leo XIII. The
first part (pp. 3–168) treats of the missionary
journeys of Paul in Asia Minor, on the ground of careful topographical
exploration and with a full knowledge of Roman history at that time. He
comes to the conclusion that nearly all the books of the New Testament
can no more be forgeries of the second century than the works of Horace
and Virgil can be forgeries of the time of Nero. He assumes all
"travel-document," which was written down under the immediate influence
of Paul, and underlies the account in The Acts of the Apostles (<reference type="scripRef" osisID="i.v.p32.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.13">Acts.
13</reference>–21), which he calls "an authority of the highest
character for an historian of Asia Minor" (p. 168). He affirms the
genuineness of the Pastoral Epistles, which suit the close of the
Neronian period (246 sqq.), and combats Holtzmann. He puts 2 Peter to
the age of "The Shepherd of Hermas" before 130 (p. 432). As to the
First Epistle of Peter, he assumes that it was written about 80, soon
after Vespasian’s resumption of the Neronian policy
(279 sqq.). If this date is correct, it would follow either that Peter
cannot have been the author, or that he must have long outlived the
Neronian persecution. The tradition that he died a martyr in Rome is
early and universal, but the exact date of his death is uncertain.</p>

<p subType="x-Norm-Center" osisID="i.v.p33">Page 285 insert:</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="i.v.p34">Of Weizsaecker’s Das Apostolische Zeitalter, which is chiefly devoted to
Paul, a second edition has appeared in 1892, slightly revised and
provided with an alphabetical index (770 pp.). It is the best critical
history of the Apostolic age from the school of Dr. Baur, whom Dr.
Weizsaecker succeeded as professor of Church history in Tuebingen, but
gives no references to literature and other opinions.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="i.v.p35">Charles Carroll Everett:
The Gospel of Paul. New York, 1893.</p>

<p subType="x-Norm-Center" osisID="i.v.p36">Page 360:</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="i.v.p37">Rodolfo Lanciani: Pagan
and Christian Rome. New York, 1893 (pp. x, 374). A very important
work which shows from recent explorations that Christianity entered
more deeply into Roman Society in the first century than is usually
supposed.</p>

<p subType="x-Norm-Center" osisID="i.v.p38">Page 401 add:</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="i.v.p39">Henry William Watkins:
Modern Criticism in its relation to the Fourth Gospel; being the
Bampton Lectures for 1890. London, 1890. Only the external
evidence, but with a history of opinions since
Breitschneider’s Probabilia.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="i.v.p40">Paton J. Gloag:
Introduction to the Johannine Writings. London, 1891 (pp. 440).
Discusses the critical questions connected with the Gospel, the
Epistles, and the Apocalypse of John from a liberal conservative
standpoint.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="i.v.p41">E. Schuerer: On the
Genuineness of the Fourth Gospel. In the "Contemporary Review" for
September, 1891.</p>

<p subType="x-Norm-Center" osisID="i.v.p42">Page 484:</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="i.v.p43">E. Loening: Die Gemeindeverfassung des Urchristenthums. Halle,
1889—CH. De Smedt: L’organisation des églises
chrétiennes jusqu’au milieu du 3e
siècle. 1889.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="i.v.p44">Page 569. Add to literature:</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="i.v.p45">Gregory: Prolegomena to
Tischendorf, Pt. II., 1890. (Pt. III. will complete this work.)</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="i.v.p46">Schaff: Companion to the
Greek Testament, 4th ed. revised, 1892.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="i.v.p47">Salmon: Introduction to the
New Testament, 5th ed., 1890.,</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="i.v.p48">Holtzmann: Introduction to
the New Testament, 3d ed., 1892.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="i.v.p49">F. Godet: Introduction au
Nouveau Testament. Neuchatel, 1893. The first volume contains the
Introduction to the Pauline Epistles; the second and third will contain
the Introduction to the Gospels, the Catholic Epp. and the Revelation.
To be translated.</p>

<p subType="x-Norm-Center" osisID="i.v.p50">Page 576:</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="i.v.p51">Robinson’s Harmony, revised
edition, by M B. Riddle (Professor in
Allegheny Theological Seminary), New York, 1885.</p>

<p subType="x-Norm-Center" osisID="i.v.p52">Page 724:</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="i.v.p53">Friedrich Spitta: Die Apostelgeschichte, ihre Quellen und ihr historischer
Wert. Halle, 1891 (pp. 380). It is briefly criticised by
Ramsey.</p>

<p osisID="i.v.p54"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="i.v.p55"><milestone type="x-br"/></p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="i.v.p56">GENERAL INTRODUCTION</p>

<p osisID="i.v.p57"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="i.v.p58"><milestone type="x-br"/></p>


<div type="x-div3" divTitle="Literature" n="i" osisID="i.v.i">

<p subType="x-c24" osisID="i.v.i.p1">Literature</p>

<p osisID="i.v.i.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-c22" osisID="i.v.i.p3">C. Sagittarius: Introductio in
historiam ecclesiasticam. Jen.
1694.</p>

<p subType="x-c22" osisID="i.v.i.p4">F.
WALCH: <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.i.p4.4">Grundsätze der zur K. Gesch. nöthigen
Vorbereitungslehren u. Bücherkenntnisse. 3d ed. Giessen,
1793.</reference></p>

<p subType="x-c22" osisID="i.v.i.p5">Flügge: <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.i.p5.4">Einleitung in das Studium u. die Liter. der K.</reference>
<reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.i.p5.5">G. Gött. 1801.</reference></p>

<p subType="x-c22" osisID="i.v.i.p6">John G.
Dowling: <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.i.p6.4">An Introduction to the Critical Study of Ecclesiastical
History, attempted in an account of the progress, and a short notice of
the sources of the history of the Church.</reference><reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.i.p6.5">London, 1838.</reference></p>

<p subType="x-c22" osisID="i.v.i.p7">Möhler (R. C.):
<reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.i.p7.4">Einleitung in die K</reference>. <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.i.p7.6">G. 1839 ("Verm.
Schriften," ed. Döllinger, II. 261 sqq.).</reference></p>

<p subType="x-c22" osisID="i.v.i.p8">Kliefoth: <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.i.p8.4">Einleitung in die Dogmengeschichte</reference>. <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.i.p8.6">Parchim &amp; Ludwigslust,
1839.</reference></p>

<p subType="x-c22" osisID="i.v.i.p9">Philip
Schaff: <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.i.p9.4">What is Church History? A Vindication of the Idea of
Historical Development</reference>. <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.i.p9.6">Philad. 1846.</reference></p>

<p subType="x-c22" osisID="i.v.i.p10">H B.
Smith: <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.i.p10.4">Nature and Worth of the Science of Church
History</reference>. <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.i.p10.6">Andover, 1851.</reference></p>

<p subType="x-c22" osisID="i.v.i.p11">E. P.
Humphrey: <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.i.p11.4">lnaugural Address, delivered at the Danville Theol.
Seminary. Cincinnati, 1854.</reference></p>

<p subType="x-c22" osisID="i.v.i.p12">R.
Turnbull: <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.i.p12.4">Christ in History; or, the Central Power among Men. Bost.
1854, 2d ed. 1860.</reference></p>

<p subType="x-c22" osisID="i.v.i.p13">W. G. T.
Shedd: <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.i.p13.4">Lectures on the Philosophy of History. Andover, Mass.,
1856.</reference></p>

<p subType="x-c22" osisID="i.v.i.p14">R. D.
Hitchcock: <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.i.p14.4">The True Idea and Uses of Church History. N. York,
1856.</reference></p>

<p subType="x-c22" osisID="i.v.i.p15">C.
Bunsen: <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.i.p15.4">Gott in der Geschichte oder der Fortschritt des Glaubens an
eine sittliche Weltordnung. Bd. I. Leipz. 1857. (Erstes Buch. Allg.
Einleit. p. 1–134.) Engl. Transl.: God in History. By
S. Winkworth. Lond. 1868. 3 vols.</reference></p>

<p subType="x-c22" osisID="i.v.i.p16">A. P.
Stanley: <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.i.p16.4">Three Introductory Lectures on the Study of Eccles. History
Lond. 1857. (Also incorporated in his History of the Eastern Church
1861.)</reference></p>

<p subType="x-c22" osisID="i.v.i.p17">Goldwin
Smith: <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.i.p17.4">Lectures on the Study of History, delivered in Oxford,
1859–’61. Oxf. and Lond. (republished
in N. York) 1866.</reference></p>

<p subType="x-c22" osisID="i.v.i.p18">J. Gust.
Droysen: <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.i.p18.4">Grundriss der Historik. Leipz. 1868; new ed.
1882.</reference></p>

<p subType="x-c22" osisID="i.v.i.p19"><reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.i.p19.1">C. de Smedt (R. C.):
Introductio generalis ad historiam ecclesiasticam critice tractandam.
Gandavi (Ghent), 1876 (533 pp.).</reference></p>

<p subType="x-c22" osisID="i.v.i.p20">E. A.
Freeman: <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.i.p20.4">The Methods of Historical Study. Lond 1886.</reference></p>

<p subType="x-c22" osisID="i.v.i.p21">O.
Lorenz: <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.i.p21.4">Geschichtswissenschaft. Berlin, 1886.</reference></p>

<p subType="x-c22" osisID="i.v.i.p22">Jos.
Nirschl (R. C.): <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.i.p22.4">Propädeutik der Kirchengeschichte. Mainz, 1888
(352 pp.).</reference></p>

<p subType="x-c22" osisID="i.v.i.p23">On the philosophy of history in
general, see the works of Herder (<reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.i.p23.5">Ideen zur Philosophie der Gesch. der Menschheit</reference>), Fred.
Schlegel, Hegel (1840, transl. by Sibree, 1870), Hermann (1870), Rocholl (1878), Flint (<reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.i.p23.22">The Philosophy of History in
Europe. Edinb., 1874, etc.</reference>), Lotze (<reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.i.p23.27">Mikrokosmus, bk. viith; 4th ed.
1884; Eng. transl. by Elizabeth Hamilton and E. E. C. Jones, 1885, 3d
ed. 1888</reference>). A philosophy of church
history is a desideratum. Herder and Lotze come nearest to
it</p>

<p subType="x-c22" osisID="i.v.i.p24">A fuller introduction, see in
Schaff: <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.i.p24.2">History of the Apostolic Church;
with a General Introduction to Ch. H. (N. York, 1853), pp.
1–134.</reference></p>

</div>


<div type="x-div3" divTitle="Nature of Church History" n="1" osisID="i.v.1">

<p subType="x-head" osisID="i.v.1.p1">§ 1. Nature of Church History.</p>

<p osisID="i.v.1.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PFirst" osisID="i.v.1.p3">History has two sides, a
divine and a human. On the part of God, it is his revelation in the
order of time (as the creation is his revelation in the order of
space), and the successive unfolding of a plan of infinite wisdom,
justice, and mercy, looking to his glory and the eternal happiness of
mankind. On the part of man, history is the biography of the human
race, and the gradual development, both normal and abnormal, of all its
physical, intellectual, and moral forces to the final consummation at
the general judgment, with its eternal rewards and punishments. The
idea of universal history presupposes the Christian idea of the unity
of God, and the unity and common destiny of men, and was unknown to
ancient Greece and Rome. A view of history which overlooks or
undervalues the divine factor starts from deism and consistently runs
into atheism; while the opposite view, which overlooks the free agency
of man and his moral responsibility and guilt, is essentially
fatalistic and pantheistic.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.1.p4">From the human agency we may distinguish the
Satanic, which enters as a third power into the history of the race. In
the temptation of Adam in Paradise, the temptation of Christ in the
wilderness, and at every great epoch, Satan appears as the antagonist
of God, endeavoring to defeat the plan of redemption and the progress
of Christ’s kingdom, and using weak and wicked men for
his schemes, but is always defeated in the end by the superior wisdom
of God.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.1.p5">The central current and ultimate aim of universal
history is the Kingdom of God established by Jesus
Christ. This is the grandest and most comprehensive institution
in the world, as vast as humanity and as enduring as eternity. All
other institutions are made subservient to it, and in its interest the
whole world is governed. It is no after-thought of God, no subsequent
emendation of the plan of creation, but it is the eternal forethought,
the controlling idea, the beginning, the middle, and the end of all his
ways and works. The first Adam is a type of the second Adam; creation
looks to redemption as the solution of its problems. Secular history,
far from controlling sacred history, is controlled by it, must directly
or indirectly subserve its ends, and can only be fully understood in
the central light of Christian truth and the plan of salvation. The
Father, who directs the history of the world, "draws to the Son," who
rules the history of the church, and the Son leads back to the Father,
that "God may be all in all." "All things," says St. Paul, "were
created through Christ and unto Christ: and He is before all things,
and in Him all things hold together. And He is the head of the body,
the Church: who is the beginning, the firstborn from the dead, that in
all things He may have the pre-eminence." <reference type="scripRef" osisID="i.v.1.p5.2" osisRef="Bible:Col.1.16-Col.1.18">Col.
1:16–18</reference>.
"The Gospel," says <name osisID="i.v.1.p5.3">John von
Müller</name>, summing up the final result of his lifelong
studies in history, "is the fulfilment of all hopes, the perfection of
all philosophy, the interpreter of all revolutions, the key of all
seeming contradictions of the physical and moral worlds; it is
life—it is immortality."</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.1.p6">The history of the church is the rise and progress
of the kingdom of heaven upon earth, for the glory of God and the
salvation of the world. It begins with the creation of Adam, and with
that promise of the serpent-bruiser, which relieved the loss of the
paradise of innocence by the hope of future redemption from the curse
of sin. It comes down through the preparatory revelations under the
patriarchs, Moses, and the prophets, to the immediate forerunner of the
Saviour, who pointed his followers to the Lamb of God, which taketh
away the sin of the world. But this part of its course was only
introduction. Its proper starting-point is the incarnation of the
Eternal Word, who dwelt among us and revealed his glory, the glory as
of the only-begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth; and next
to this, the miracle of the first Pentecost, when the Church took her
place as a Christian institution, filled with the Spirit of the
glorified Redeemer and entrusted with the conversion of all nations.
Jesus Christ, the God-Man and Saviour of the world, is the author of
the new creation, the soul and the head of the church, which is his
body and his bride. In his person and work lies all the fulness of the
Godhead and of renewed humanity, the whole plan of redemption, and the
key of all history from the creation of man in the image of God to the
resurrection of the body unto everlasting life.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.1.p7">This is the objective conception of church
history.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.1.p8">In the subjective sense of the word, considered as
theological science and art, church history is the faithful and
life-like description of the origin and progress of this heavenly
kingdom. It aims to reproduce in thought and to embody in language its
outward and inward development down to the present time. It is a
continuous commentary on the Lord’s twin parables of
the mustard-seed and of the leaven. It shows at once how Christianity
spreads over the world, and how it penetrates, transforms, and
sanctifies the individual and all the departments and institutions of
social life. It thus embraces not only the external fortunes of
Christendom, but more especially her inward experience, her religious
life, her mental and moral activity, her conflicts with the ungodly
world, her sorrows and sufferings, her joys and her triumphs over sin
and error. It records the deeds of those heroes of faith "who subdued
kingdoms, wrought righteousness, obtained promises, stopped the months
of lions, quenched the violence of fire, escaped the edge of the sword,
out of weakness were made strong, waxed valiant in fight, turned to
flight the armies of aliens."</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.1.p9">From Jesus Christ, since his manifestation in the
flesh, an unbroken stream of divine light and life has been and is
still flowing, and will continue to flow, in ever-growing volume
through the waste of our fallen race; and all that is truly great and
good and holy in the annals of church history is due, ultimately, to
the impulse of his spirit. He is the fly-wheel in the
world’s progress. But he works upon the world through
sinful and fallible men, who, while as self-conscious and free agents
they are accountable for all their actions, must still, willing or
unwilling, serve the great purpose of God. As Christ, in the days of
his flesh, was bated, mocked, and crucified, his church likewise is
assailed and persecuted by the powers of darkness. The history of
Christianity includes therefore a history of Antichrist. With an
unending succession of works of saving power and manifestations of
divine truth and holiness, it uncovers also a fearful mass of
corruption and error. The church militant must, from its very nature,
be at perpetual warfare with the world, the flesh, and the devil, both
without and within. For as Judas sat among the apostles, so "the man of
sin" sits in the temple of God; and as even a Peter denied the Lord,
though he afterwards wept bitterly and regained his holy office, so do
many disciples in all ages deny him in word and in deed.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.1.p10">But on the other hand, church history shows that
God is ever stronger than Satan, and that his kingdom of light puts the
kingdom of darkness to shame. The Lion of the tribe of Judah has
bruised the head of the serpent. With the crucifixion of Christ his
resurrection also is repeated ever anew in the history of his church on
earth; and there has never yet been a day without a witness of his
presence and power ordering all things according to his holy will. For
he has received all power in heaven and in earth for the good of his
people, and from his heavenly throne he rules even his foes. The
infallible word of promise, confirmed by experience, assures us that
all corruptions, heresies, and schisms must, under the guidance of
divine wisdom and love, subserve the cause of truth, holiness, and
peace; till, at the last judgment, Christ shall make his enemies his
footstool, and rule undisputed with the sceptre of righteousness and
peace, and his church shall realize her idea and destiny as "the
fullness of him that filleth all in all."</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.1.p11">Then will history itself, in its present form, as
a struggling and changeful development, give place to perfection, and
the stream of time come to rest in the ocean of eternity, but this rest
will be the highest form of life and activity in God and for God.</p>

</div>


<div type="x-div3" divTitle="Branches of Church History" n="2" osisID="i.v.2">

<p subType="x-head" osisID="i.v.2.p1">§ 2. Branches of Church History.</p>

<p osisID="i.v.2.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PFirst" osisID="i.v.2.p3">The kingdom of Christ, in its principle and aim, is
as comprehensive as humanity. It is truly catholic or universal,
designed and adapted for all nations and ages, for all the powers of
the soul, and all classes of society. It breathes into the mind, the
heart, and the will a higher, supernatural life, and consecrates the
family, the state, science, literature, art, and commerce to holy ends,
till finally God becomes all in all. Even the body, and the whole
visible creation, which groans for redemption from its bondage to
vanity and for the glorious liberty of the children of God, shall share
in this universal transformation; for we look for the resurrection of
the body, and for the new earth, wherein dwelleth righteousness. But we
must not identify the kingdom of God with the visible church or
churches, which are only its temporary organs and agencies, more or
less inadequate, while the kingdom itself is more comprehensive, and
will last for ever.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.2.p4">Accordingly, church history has various
departments, corresponding to the different branches of secular history
and of natural life. The principal divisions are:</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.2.p5">I. The history of missions, or of the spread of
Christianity among unconverted nations, whether barbarous or civilized.
This work must continue, till "the fullness of the Gentiles shall come
in," and "Israel shall be saved." The law of the missionary progress is
expressed in the two parables of the grain of mustard-seed which grows
into a tree, and of the leaven which gradually pervades the whole lump.
The first parable illustrates the outward expansion, the second the
all-penetrating and transforming power of Christianity. It is difficult
to convert a nation; it is more difficult to train it to the high
standard of the gospel; it is most difficult to revive and reform a
dead or apostate church.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.2.p6">The foreign mission work has achieved three great
conquests: first, the conversion of the elect remnant of the Jews, and
of civilized Greeks and Romans, in the first three centuries; then the
conversion of the barbarians of Northern and Western Europe, in the
middle ages; and last, the combined efforts of various churches and
societies for the conversion of the savage races in America, Africa,
and Australia, and the semi-civilized nations of Eastern Asia, in our
own time. The whole non-Christian world is now open to missionary
labor, except the Mohammedan, which will likewise become accessible at
no distant day.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.2.p7">The domestic or home mission work embraces the
revival of Christian life in corrupt or neglected portions of the
church in old countries, the supply of emigrants in new countries with
the means of grace, and the labors, among the semi-heathenism
populations of large cities. Here we may mention the planting of a
purer Christianity among the petrified sects in Bible Lands, the labors
of the Gustavus Adolphus Society, and the Inner mission of Germany, the
American Home Missionary Societies for the western states and
territories, the City Mission Societies in London, New York, and other
fast-growing cities.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.2.p8">II. The history of Persecution by hostile powers; as by Judaism and
Heathenism in the first three centuries, and by Mohammedanism in the
middle age. This apparent repression of the church proves a purifying
process, brings out the moral heroism of martyrdom, and thus works in
the end for the spread and establishment of Christianity. "The blood of
martyrs is the seed of the church."<note osisID="edn3"><p osisID="i.v.2.p9"> A well-known saying of
Tertullian, who lived in the midst of persecution. A very different
estimate of martyrdom is suggested by the Arabic proverb "The ink of
the scholar is more precious than the blood of the martyr." The just
estimate depends on the quality of the scholar and the quality of the
martyr, and the cause for which the one lives and the other
dies.</p></note> There are cases,
however, where systematic and persistent persecution has crushed out
the church or reduced it to a mere shadow, as in Palestine, Egypt, and
North Africa, under the despotism of the Moslems.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.2.p10">Persecution, like missions, is both foreign and
domestic. Besides being assailed from without by the followers of false
religions, the church suffers also from intestine wars and violence.
Witness the religious wars in France, Holland, and England, the Thirty
Years’ War in Germany, all of which grew out of the
Protestant Reformation and the Papal Reaction; the crusade against the
Albigenses and Waldenses, the horrors of the Spanish Inquisition, the
massacre of the Huguenots, the dragonnades of Louis XIV., the crushing
out of the Reformation in Bohemia, Belgium, and Southern Europe; but
also, on the Protestant side, the persecution of Anabaptists, the
burning of Servetus in Geneva the penal laws of the reign of Elizabeth
against Catholic and Puritan Dissenters, the hanging of witches and
Quakers in New England. More Christian blood has been shed by
Christians than by heathens and Mohammedans.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.2.p11">The persecutions of Christians by Christians form
the satanic chapters, the fiendish midnight scenes, in the history of
the church. But they show also the gradual progress of the truly
Christian spirit of religious toleration and freedom. Persecution
exhausted ends in toleration, and toleration is a step to freedom. The
blood of patriots is the price of civil, the blood of martyrs the price
of religious liberty. The conquest is dear, the progress slow and often
interrupted, but steady and irresistible. The principle of intolerance
is now almost universally disowned in the Christian world, except by
ultramontane Romanism (which indirectly reasserts it in the Papal
Syllabus of 1864); but a ruling church, allied to the state, under the
influence of selfish human nature, and, relying on the arm of flesh
rather than the power of truth, is always tempted to impose or retain
unjust restrictions on dissenting sects, however innocent and useful
they may have proved to be.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.2.p12">In the United States all Christian denominations
and sects are placed on a basis of equality before the law, and alike
protected by the government in their property and right of public
worship, yet self-supporting and self-governing; and, in turn, they
strengthen the moral foundations of society by training loyal and
virtuous citizens. Freedom of religion must be recognized as one of the
inalienable rights of man, which lies in the sacred domain of
conscience, beyond the restraint and control of politics, and which the
government is bound to protect as much as any other fundamental right.
Freedom is liable to abuse, and abuse may be punished. But Christianity
is itself the parent of true freedom from the bondage of sin and error,
and is the best protector and regulator of freedom.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.2.p13">III. The history of Church
Government and Discipline. The church is not only an invisible
communion of saints, but at the same time a visible body, needing
organs, laws, and forms, to regulate its activity. Into this department
of history fall the various forms of church polity: the apostolic, the
primitive episcopal, the patriarchal, the papal, the consistorial, the
presbyterial, the congregational, etc.; and the history of the law and
discipline of the church, and her relation to the state, under all
these forms.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.2.p14">IV. The history of Worship, or divine service, by which the church
celebrates, revives, and strengthens her fellowship with her divine
head. This falls into such subdivisions as the history of preaching, of
catechisms, of liturgy, of rites and ceremonies, and of religious art,
particularly sacred poetry and music.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.2.p15">The history of church government and the history
of worship are often put together under the title of Ecclesiastical
Antiquities or Archaeology, and commonly confined to the patristic age,
whence most of the, Catholic institutions and usages of the church date
their origin. But they may as well be extended to the formative period
of Protestantism.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.2.p16">V. The history of Christian
Life, or practical morality and religion: the exhibition of the
distinguishing virtues and vices of different ages, of the development
of Christian philanthropy, the regeneration of domestic life, the
gradual abatement and abolition of slavery and other social evils, the
mitigation and diminution of the horrors of war, the reform of civil
law and of government, the spread of civil and religious liberty, and
the whole progress of civilization, under the influence of
Christianity.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.2.p17">VI. The history of Theology, or of Christian learning and literature. Each
branch of theology—exegetical, doctrinal, ethical,
historical, and practical—has a history of its
own.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.2.p18">The history of doctrines or dogmas is here the
most important, and is therefore frequently treated by itself. Its
object is to show how the mind of the, church has gradually apprehended
and unfolded the divine truths of revelation, how the teachings of
scripture have been formulated and shaped into dogmas, and grown into
creeds and confessions of faith, or systems of doctrine stamped with
public authority. This growth of the church in the knowledge of the
infallible word of God is a constant struggle against error, misbelief,
and unbelief; and the history of heresies is an essential part of the
history of doctrines.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.2.p19">Every important dogma now professed by the
Christian church is the result of a severe conflict with error. The
doctrine of the holy Trinity, for instance, was believed from the
beginning, but it required, in addition to the preparatory labors of
the ante-Nicene age, fifty years of controversy, in which the strongest
intellects were absorbed, until it was brought to the clear expression
of the Niceno-Constantinopolitan Creed. The Christological conflict was
equally long and intense, until it was brought to a settlement by the
council of Chalcedon. The Reformation of the sixteenth century was a
continual warfare with popery. The doctrinal symbols of the various
churches, from the Apostles’ Creed down to the
confessions of Dort and Westminster, and more recent standards, embody
the results of the theological battles of the militant church.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.2.p20">The various departments of church history have not
a merely external and mechanical, but an organic relation to each
other, and form one living whole, and this relation the historian must
show. Each period also is entitled to a peculiar arrangement, according
to its character. The number, order, and extent of the different
divisions must be determined by their actual importance at a given
time.</p>

</div>


<div type="x-div3" divTitle="Sources of Church History" n="3" osisID="i.v.3">

<p subType="x-head" osisID="i.v.3.p1">§ 3. Sources of Church History.</p>

<p osisID="i.v.3.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PFirst" osisID="i.v.3.p3">The sources of church history, the data on which we
rely for our knowledge, are partly divine, partly human. For the
history of the kingdom of God from the creation to the close of the
apostolic age, we have the inspired writings of the Old and New
Testaments. But after the death of the apostles we have only human
authorities, which of course cannot claim to be infallible. These human
sources are partly written, partly unwritten.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.3.p4">I. The written sources include:</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.3.p5">(a) Official documents of ecclesiastical and civil
authorities: acts of councils and synods, confessions of faith,
liturgies, church laws, and the official letters of popes, patriarchs,
bishops, and representative bodies.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.3.p6">(b) Private writings of personal actors in the
history: the works of the church fathers, heretics, and heathen
authors, for the first six centuries; of the missionaries, scholastic
and mystic divines, for the middle age; and of the reformers and their
opponents, for the sixteenth century. These documents are the richest
mines for the historian. They give history in its birth and actual
movement. But they must be carefully sifted and weighed; especially the
controversial writings, where fact is generally more or less
adulterated with party spirit, heretical and orthodox.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.3.p7">(c) Accounts of chroniclers and historians,
whether friends or enemies, who were eye-witnesses of what they relate.
The value of these depends, of course, on the capacity and credibility
of the authors, to be determined by careful criticism. Subsequent
historians can be counted among the direct or immediate sources only so
far as they have drawn from reliable and contemporary documents, which
have either been wholly or partially lost, like many of Eusebius
authorities for the period before Constantine, or are inaccessible to
historians generally, as are the papal regesta and other
documents of the Vatican library.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.3.p8">(d) Inscriptions, especially those on tombs and
catacombs, revealing the faith and hope of Christians in times of
persecution. Among the ruins of Egypt and Babylonia whole libraries
have been disentombed and deciphered, containing mythological and
religious records, royal proclamations, historical, astronomical, and
poetical compositions, revealing an extinct civilization and shedding
light on some parts of Old Testament history.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.3.p9">II. The Unwritten sources
are far less numerous: church edifices, works of sculpture and
painting, and other monuments, religious customs and ceremonies, very
important for the history of worship and ecclesiastical art, and
significant of the spirit of their age.<note osisID="edn4"><p osisID="i.v.3.p10"> Comp. F.
Piper: Einleitung in die
monumentale Theologie. Goths,
1867</p></note></p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.3.p11">The works of art are symbolical embodiments of the
various types of Christianity. The plain symbols and crude sculptures
of the catacombs correspond to the period of persecution; the basilicas
to the Nicene age; the Byzantine churches to the genius of the
Byzantine state-churchism; the Gothic cathedrals to the Romano-Germanic
catholicism of the middle ages; the renaissance style to the revival of
letters.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.3.p12">To come down to more recent times, the spirit of
Romanism can be best appreciated amidst the dead and living monuments
of Rome, Italy, and Spain. Lutheranism must be studied in Wittenberg,
Northern Germany, and Scandinavia; Calvinism in Geneva, France,
Holland, and Scotland; Anglicanism at Oxford, Cambridge, and London;
Presbyterianism in Scotland and the United States; Congregationalism in
England and New England. For in the mother countries of these
denominations we generally find not only the largest printed and
manuscript sources, but also the architectural, sculptural, sepulchral,
and other monumental remains, the natural associations, oral
traditions, and living representatives of the past, who, however they
may have departed from the faith of their ancestors, still exhibit
their national genius, social condition, habits, and
customs—often in a far more instructive manner than
ponderous printed volumes.</p>

</div>


<div type="x-div3" divTitle="Periods of Church History" n="4" osisID="i.v.4">

<p subType="x-head" osisID="i.v.4.p1">§ 4. Periods of Church History.</p>

<p osisID="i.v.4.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PFirst" osisID="i.v.4.p3">The purely chronological or annalistic method, though
pursued by the learned Baronius and his continuators, is now generally
abandoned. It breaks the natural flow of events, separates things which
belong together, and degrades history to a mere chronicle.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p4">The centurial plan, which prevailed from Flacius
to Mosheim, is an improvement. It allows a much better view of the
progress and connection of things. But it still imposes on the history
a forced and mechanical arrangement; for the salient points or epochs
very seldom coincide with the limits of our centuries. The rise of
Constantine, for example, together with the union of church and state,
dates from the year 311; that of the absolute papacy, in Hildebrand,
from 1049; the Reformation from 1517; the peace of Westphalia took
place in 1648; the landing of the Pilgrim Fathers of New England in
1620; the American emancipation in 1776; the French revolution in 1789;
the revival of religious life in Germany began in 1817.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p5">The true division must grow out of the actual
course of the history itself, and present the different phases of its
development or stages of its life. These we call periods or ages. The
beginning of a new period is called an epoch, or a stopping and
starting point.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p6">In regard to the number and length of periods
there is, indeed, no unanimity; the less, on account of the various
denominational differences establishing different points of view,
especially since the sixteenth century. The Reformation, for instance,
has less importance for the Roman church than for the Protestant, and
almost none for the Greek; and while the edict of Nantes forms a
resting-place in the history of French Protestantism, and the treaty of
Westphalia in that of German, neither of these events had as much to do
with English Protestantism as the accession of Elizabeth, the rise of
Cromwell, the restoration of the Stuarts, and the revolution of
1688.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p7">But, in spite of all confusion and difficulty in
regard to details, it is generally agreed to divide the history of
Christianity into three principal parts—ancient,
mediaeval, and modern; though there is not a like agreement as to the
dividing epochs, or points of departure and points of termination.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p8">I. The history of Ancient
Christianity, from the birth of Christ to Gregory the Great.
a.d. 1–590.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p9">This is the age of the Graeco-Latin church, or of
the Christian Fathers. Its field is the countries around the
Mediterranean—Western Asia, Northern Africa, and
Southern Europe—just the theatre of the old Roman
empire and of classic heathendom. This age lays the foundation, in
doctrine, government, and worship, for all the subsequent history. It
is the common progenitor of all the various confessions.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p10">The Life of Christ and the Apostolic Church are by
far the most important sections, and require separate treatment. They
form the divine-human groundwork of the church, and inspire, regulate,
and correct all subsequent periods.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p11">Then, at the beginning of the fourth century, the
accession of Constantine, the first Christian emperor, marks a decisive
turn; Christianity rising from a persecuted sect to the prevailing
religion of the Graeco-Roman empire. In the history of doctrines, the
first oecumenical council of Nicaea, falling in the midst of
Constantine’s reign, a.d.
325, has the prominence of an epoch.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p12">Here, then, are three periods within the first or
patristic era, which we may severally designate as the period of the
Apostles, the period of the Martyrs, and the period of the Christian
Emperors and Patriarchs.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p13">II. Medieval
Christianity, from Gregory I to the Reformation. a.d. 590–1517.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p14">The middle age is variously
reckoned—from Constantine, 306 or 311; from the fall
of the West Roman empire, 476; from Gregory the Great, 590; from
Charlemagne, 800. But it is very generally regarded as closing at the
beginning of the sixteenth century, and more precisely, at the outbreak
of the Reformation in 1517. Gregory the Great seems to us to form the
most proper ecclesiastical point of division. With him, the author of
the Anglo-Saxon mission, the last of the church fathers, and the first
of the proper popes, begins in earnest, and with decisive success, the
conversion of the barbarian tribes, and, at the same time, the
development of the absolute papacy, and the alienation of the eastern
and western churches.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p15">This suggests the distinctive character of the
middle age: the transition of the church from Asia and Africa to Middle
and Western Europe, from the Graeco-Roman nationality to that of the
Germanic, Celtic, and Slavonic races, and from the culture of the
ancient classic world to the modern civilization. The great work of the
church then was the conversion and education of the heathen barbarians,
who conquered and demolished the Roman empire, indeed, but were
themselves conquered and transformed by its Christianity. This work was
performed mainly by the Latin church, under a firm hierarchical
constitution, culminating in the bishop of Rome. The Greek church
though she made some conquests among the Slavic tribes of Eastern
Europe, particularly in the Russian empire, since grown so important,
was in turn sorely pressed and reduced by Mohammedanism in Asia and
Africa, the very seat of primitive Christianity, and at last in
Constantinople itself; and in doctrine, worship, and organization, she
stopped at the position of the oecumenical councils and the patriarchal
constitution of the fifth century.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p16">In the middle age the development of the hierarchy
occupies the foreground, so that it may be called the church of the
Popes, as distinct from the ancient church of the Fathers, and the
modern church of the Reformers.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p17">In the growth and decay of the Roman hierarchy
three popes stand out as representatives of as many epochs: Gregory I.,
or the Great (590), marks the rise of absolute papacy; Gregory VII., or
Hildebrand (1049), its summit; and Boniface VIII. (1294), its decline.
We thus have again three periods in mediaeval church history. We may
briefly distinguish them as the Missionary, the Papal, and the pre- or
ante-Reformatory<note osisID="edn5"><p osisID="i.v.4.p18"> This new word is coined
after the analogy of ante-Nicene, and in imitation of the
German vor-reformatorisch. It is the age of
the forerunners of the Reformation, or reformers before the
Reformation, as Ullmann calls such men as Wicklyffe, Huss, Savonarola,
Wessel, etc. The term presents only one view of the period from
Boniface VIII. to Luther. But this is the case with every other single
term we may choose.</p></note> ages of Catholicism.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p19">III. Modern Christianity,
from the Reformation of the sixteenth century to the present time.
a.d. 1517–1880.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p20">Modern history moves chiefly among the nations of
Europe, and from the seventeenth century finds a vast new theatre in
North America. Western Christendom now splits into two hostile
parts—one remaining on the old path, the other
striking out a new one; while the eastern church withdraws still
further from the stage of history, and presents a scene of almost
undisturbed stagnation, except in modern Russia and Greece. Modern
church history is the age of Protestantism in conflict with Romanism,
of religious liberty and independence in conflict with the principle of
authority and tutelage, of individual and personal Christianity against
an objective and traditional church system.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p21">Here again three different periods appear, which
may be denoted briefly by the terms, Reformation, Revolution, and
Revival.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p22">The sixteenth century, next to the apostolic age
the most fruitful and interesting period of church history, is the
century of the evangelical renovation of the Church, and the papal
counter-reform. It is the cradle of all Protestant denominations and
sects, and of modern Romanism.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p23">The seventeenth century is the period of
scholastic orthodoxy, polemic confessionalism, and comparative
stagnation. The reformatory motion ceases on the continent, but goes on
in the mighty Puritanic struggle in England, and extends even into the
primitive forests of the American colonies. The seventeenth century is
the most fruitful in the church history of England, and gave rise to
the various nonconformist or dissenting denominations which were
transplanted to North America, and have out-grown some of the older
historic churches. Then comes, in the eighteenth century, the Pietistic
and Methodistic revival of practical religion in opposition to dead
orthodoxy and stiff formalism. In the Roman church Jesuitism prevails
but opposed by the half-evangelical Jansenism, and the quasiliberal
Gallicanism.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p24">In the second half of the eighteenth century
begins the vast overturning of traditional ideas and institutions,
leading to revolution in state, and infidelity in church, especially in
Roman Catholic France and Protestant Germany. Deism in England, atheism
in France, rationalism in Germany, represent the various degrees of the
great modern apostasy from the orthodox creeds.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p25">The nineteenth century presents, in part, the
further development of these negative and destructive tendencies, but
with it also the revival of Christian faith and church life, and the
beginnings of a new creation by the everlasting gospel. The revival may
be dated from the third centenary of the Reformation, in 1817.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p26">In the same period North America, English and
Protestant in its prevailing character, but presenting an asylum for
all the nations, churches, and sects of the old world, with a peaceful
separation of the temporal and the spiritual power, comes upon the
stage like a young giant full of vigor and promise.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p27">Thus we have, in all, nine periods of church
history, as follows:</p>

<p osisID="i.v.4.p28"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p29">First Period:<milestone type="x-br"/>
The Life of Christ, and the Apostolic church.<milestone type="x-br"/>
From the Incarnation to the death of St. John. a.d. 1–100.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p30">Second Period:<milestone type="x-br"/>
Christianity under persecution in the Roman empire.<milestone type="x-br"/>
From the death of St. John to Constantine, the first Christian emperor.
a.d. 100–311.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p31">Third Period:<milestone type="x-br"/>
Christianity in union with the Graeco-Roman empire, and amidst
the storms of the great migration of nations.<milestone type="x-br"/>
From Constantine the Great to Pope Gregory I. a.d. 311–590.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p32">Fourth Period:<milestone type="x-br"/>
Christianity planted among the Teutonic, Celtic, and Slavonic
nations.<milestone type="x-br"/>
From Gregory I. to Hildebrand, or Gregory VII. a.d. 590–1049.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p33">Fifth Period:<milestone type="x-br"/>
The Church under the papal hierarchy, and the scholastic
theology.<milestone type="x-br"/>
From Gregory VII. to Boniface VIII. a.d.
1049–1294.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p34">Sixth Period:<milestone type="x-br"/>
The decay of mediaeval Catholicism, and the preparatory movements for
the Reformation.<milestone type="x-br"/>
From Boniface VIII. to Luther. a.d.
1294–1517.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p35">Seventh Period:<milestone type="x-br"/>
The evangelical Reformation, and the Roman Catholic
Reaction.<milestone type="x-br"/>
From Luther to the Treaty of Westphalia. a.d.
1517–1648.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p36">Eighth Period:<milestone type="x-br"/>
The age of polemic orthodoxy and exclusive confessionalism, with
reactionary and progressive movements.<milestone type="x-br"/>
From the Treaty of Westphalia to the French Revolution. a.d. 1648–1790.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p37">Ninth Period:<milestone type="x-br"/>
The spread of infidelity, and the revival of Christianity in Europe and
America, with missionary efforts encircling the globe.<milestone type="x-br"/>
From the French Revolution to the present time. a.d. 1790–1880.</p>

<p osisID="i.v.4.p38"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.4.p39">Christianity has thus passed through many stages
of its earthly life, and yet has hardly reached the period of full
manhood in Christ Jesus. During this long succession of centuries it
has outlived the destruction of Jerusalem, the dissolution of the Roman
empire, fierce persecutions from without, and heretical corruptions
from within, the barbarian invasion, the confusion of the dark ages,
the papal tyranny, the shock of infidelity, the ravages of revolution,
the attacks of enemies and the errors of friends, the rise and fall of
proud kingdoms, empires, and republics, philosophical systems, and
social organizations without number. And, behold, it still lives, and
lives in greater strength and wider extent than ever; controlling the
progress of civilization, and the destinies of the world; marching over
the ruins of human wisdom and folly, ever forward and onward; spreading
silently its heavenly blessings from generation to generation, and from
country to country, to the ends of the earth. It can never die; it will
never see the decrepitude of old age; but, like its divine founder, it
will live in the unfading freshness of self-renewing youth and the
unbroken vigor of manhood to the end of time, and will outlive time
itself. Single denominations and sects, human forms of doctrine,
government, and worship, after having served their purpose, may
disappear and go the way of all flesh; but the Church Universal of
Christ, in her divine life and substance, is too strong for the gates
of hell. She will only exchange her earthly garments for the festal
dress of the Lamb’s Bride, and rise from the state of
humiliation to the state of exaltation and glory. Then at the coming of
Christ she will reap the final harvest of history, and as the church
triumphant in heaven celebrate and enjoy the eternal sabbath of
holiness and peace. This will be the endless end of history, as it was
foreshadowed already at the beginning of its course in the holy rest of
God after the completion of his work of creation.</p>

</div>


<div type="x-div3" divTitle="Uses of Church History" n="5" osisID="i.v.5">

<p subType="x-head" osisID="i.v.5.p1">§ 5. Uses of Church History.</p>

<p osisID="i.v.5.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PFirst" osisID="i.v.5.p3">Church history is the most extensive, and, including
the sacred history of the Old and New Testaments, the most important
branch of theology. It is the backbone of theology or which it rests,
and the storehouse from which it derives its supplies. It is the best
commentary of Christianity itself, under all its aspects and in all its
bearings. The fulness of the stream is the glory of the fountain from
which it flows.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.5.p4">Church history has, in the first place, a general
interest for every cultivated mind, as showing the moral and religious
development of our race, and the gradual execution of the divine plan
of redemption.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.5.p5">It has special value for the theologian and
minister of the gospel, as the key to the present condition of
Christendom and the guide to successful labor in her cause. The present
is the fruit of the past, and the germ of the future. No work can stand
unless it grow out of the real wants of the age and strike firm root in
the soil of history. No one who tramples on the rights of a past
generation can claim the regard of its posterity. Church history is no
mere curiosity shop. Its facts are not dry bones, but embody living
realities, the general principles and laws for our own guidance and
action. Who studies church history studies Christianity itself in all
its phases, and human nature under the influence of Christianity as it
now is, and will be to the end of time.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.5.p6">Finally, the history of the church has practical
value for every Christian, as a storehouse of warning and
encouragement, of consolation and counsel. It is the philosophy of
facts, Christianity in living examples. If history in general be, as
<name osisID="i.v.5.p6.1">Cicero</name> describes it, "testis temporum, lux
veritatis, et magistra vitae," or, as Diodorus calls it, "the
handmaid of providence, the priestess of truth, and the mother of
wisdom," the history of the kingdom of heaven is all these in the
highest degree. Next to the holy scriptures, which are themselves a
history and depository of divine revelation, there is no stronger proof
of the continual presence of Christ with his people, no more thorough
vindication of Christianity, no richer source of spiritual wisdom and
experience, no deeper incentive to virtue and piety, than the history
of Christ’s kingdom. Every age has a message from God
to man, which it is of the greatest importance for man to
understand.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.5.p7">The Epistle to the Hebrews describes, in stirring
eloquence, the cloud of witnesses from the old dispensation for the
encouragement of the Christians. Why should not the greater cloud of
apostles, evangelists, martyrs, confessors, fathers, reformers, and
saints of every age and tongue, since the coming of Christ, be held up
for the same purpose? They were the heroes of Christian faith and love,
the living epistles of Christ, the salt of the earth, the benefactors
and glory of our race; and it is impossible rightly to study their
thoughts and deeds, their lives and deaths, without being elevated,
edified, comforted, and encouraged to follow their holy example, that
we at last, by the grace of God, be received into their fellowship, to
spend with them a blessed eternity in the praise and enjoyment of the
same God and Saviour.</p>

</div>


<div type="x-div3" divTitle="Duty of the Historian" n="6" osisID="i.v.6">

<p subType="x-head" osisID="i.v.6.p1">§ 6. Duty of the Historian.</p>

<p osisID="i.v.6.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PFirst" osisID="i.v.6.p3">The first duty of the historian, which comprehends
all others, is fidelity and justice. He must reproduce the history
itself, making it live again in his representation. His highest and
only aim should be, like a witness, to tell the truth, the whole truth,
and nothing but the truth, and, like a judge, to do full justice to
every person and event which comes under his review.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.6.p4">To be thus faithful and just he needs a threefold
qualification—scientific, artistic, and religious.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.6.p5">1. He must master the sources. For this purpose he
must be acquainted with such auxiliary sciences as ecclesiastical
philology (especially the Greek and Latin languages, in which most of
the earliest documents are written), secular history, geography, and
chronology. Then, in making use of the sources, he must thoroughly and
impartially examine their genuineness and integrity, and the
credibility and capacity of the witnesses. Thus only can he duly
separate fact from fiction, truth from error.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.6.p6">The number of sources for general history is so
large and increasing so rapidly, that it is, of course, impossible to
read and digest them all in a short lifetime. Every historian rests on
the shoulders of his predecessors. He must take some things on trust
even after the most conscientious search, and avail himself of the
invaluable aid of documentary collections and digests, ample indexes,
and exhaustive monographs, where he cannot examine all the primary
sources in detail. Only he should always carefully indicate his
authorities and verify facts, dates, and quotations. A want of accuracy
is fatal to the reputation of an historical work.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.6.p7">2. Then comes the composition. This is an art. It
must not simply recount events, but reproduce the development of the
church in living process. History is not a heap of skeletons, but an
organism filled and ruled by a reasonable soul.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.6.p8">One of the greatest difficulties here lies in
arranging the material. The best method is to combine judiciously the
chronological and topical principles of division; presenting at once
the succession of events and the several parallel (and, indeed,
interwoven) departments of the history in due proportion. Accordingly,
we first divide the whole history into periods, not arbitrary, but
determined by the actual course of events; and then we present each of
these periods in as many parallel sections or chapters as the material
itself requires. As to the number of the periods and chapters, and as
to the arrangement of the chapters, there are indeed conflicting
opinions, and in the application of our principle, as in our whole
representation, we can only make approaches to perfection. But the
principle itself is, nevertheless, the only true one.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.6.p9">The ancient classical historians, and most of the
English and French, generally present their subject in one homogeneous
composition of successive books or chapters, without rubrical division.
This method might seem to bring out better the living unity and variety
of the history at every point. Yet it really does not. Language, unlike
the pencil and the chisel, can exhibit only the succession in time, not
the local concomitance. And then this method, rigidly pursued, never
gives a complete view of any one subject, of doctrine, worship, or
practical life. It constantly mixes the various topics, breaking off
from one to bring up another, even by the most sudden transitions, till
the alternation is exhausted. The German method of periodical and
rubrical arrangement has great practical advantages for the student, in
bringing to view the order of subjects as well as the order of time.
But it should not be made a uniform and monotonous mechanism, as is
done in the Magdeburg Centuries and many subsequent works. For, while
history has its order, both of subject and of time, it is yet, like all
life, full of variety. The period of the Reformation requires a very
different arrangement from the middle age; and in modern history the
rubrical division must be combined with and made subject to a division
by confessions and countries, as the Roman Catholic, Lutheran, Reformed
churches in Germany, France, England, and America.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.6.p10">The historian should aim then to reproduce both
the unity and the variety of history, presenting the different topics
in their separate completeness, without overlooking their organic
connection. The scheme must not be arbitrarily made, and then
pedantically applied, as a Procrustean framework, to the history; but
it must be deduced from the history itself, and varied as the facts
require.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.6.p11">Another difficulty even greater than the
arrangement of the material consists in the combination of brevity and
fulness. A general church history should give a complete view of the
progress of Christ’s kingdom in all its departments.
But the material is so vast and constantly increasing, that the utmost
condensation should be studied by a judicious selection of the salient
points, which really make up the main body of history. There is no use
in writing books unless they are read. But who has time in this busy
age to weary through the forty folios of Baronius and his continuators,
or the thirteen folios of Flacius, or the forty-five octaves of
Schroeckh? The student of ecclesiastical history, it is true, wants not
miniature pictures only (as in Hase’s admirable
compend), but full-length portraits. Yet much space may be gained by
omitting the processes and unessential details, which may be left to
monographs and special treatises. Brevity is a virtue in the historian,
unless it makes him obscure and enigmatic.<note osisID="edn6"><p osisID="i.v.6.p12"> The German poet,
Friedrich Rückert, thus admirably enjoins the duty of
condensation:</p>

<p subType="x-c51" osisID="i.v.6.p13">Wie die Welt
läuft immer weiter,<milestone type="x-br"/>
Wird stets die Geschicte breiter<milestone type="x-br"/>
Und uns wird je mehr je länger<milestone type="x-br"/>
Nöthig ein Zusammendränger:</p>

<p osisID="i.v.6.p14"><milestone type="x-br"/></p>
<p osisID="i.v.6.p15"><milestone type="x-br"/></p>
<p subType="x-c51" osisID="i.v.6.p16">Nicht der aus dem
Schutt der Zeiten<milestone type="x-br"/>
Wühle mehr Erbärmlichkeiten,<milestone type="x-br"/>
Sondern der den Plunder sichte<milestone type="x-br"/>
Und zum Bau die Steine schichte</p>

<p osisID="i.v.6.p17"><milestone type="x-br"/></p>
<p osisID="i.v.6.p18"><milestone type="x-br"/></p>
<p subType="x-c51" osisID="i.v.6.p19">Nicht das Einzle
unterdrückend<milestone type="x-br"/>
Noch damit willkühlich schmückend,<milestone type="x-br"/>
Sondern in des Einzlen Hülle<milestone type="x-br"/>
Legend allgemeine Fülle;</p>

<p osisID="i.v.6.p20"><milestone type="x-br"/></p>
<p osisID="i.v.6.p21"><milestone type="x-br"/></p>
<p subType="x-c51" osisID="i.v.6.p22">Der gelesen Alles
habe,<milestone type="x-br"/>
Und besitze Dichtergabe,<milestone type="x-br"/>
Klar zu schildern mir das Wesen,<milestone type="x-br"/>
Der ich nicht ein Wort gelesen.</p>

<p osisID="i.v.6.p23"><milestone type="x-br"/></p>
<p osisID="i.v.6.p24"><milestone type="x-br"/></p>
<p subType="x-c11" osisID="i.v.6.p25">Sagt mir nichts
von Resultaten!<milestone type="x-br"/>
Denn die will ich selber ziehen.<milestone type="x-br"/>
Lasst Begebenheiten, Thaten,<milestone type="x-br"/>
Heiden, rasch vorüberziehen."</p></note></p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.6.p26">The historian, moreover, must make his work
readable and interesting, without violating truth. Some parts of
history are dull and wearisome; but, upon the whole, the truth of
history is "stranger than fiction." It is God’s own
epos. It needs no embellishment. It speaks for itself if told with
earnestness, vivacity, and freshness. Unfortunately, church historians,
with very few exceptions, are behind the great secular historians in
point of style, and represent the past as a dead corpse rather than as
a living and working power of abiding interest. Hence church histories
are so little read outside of professional circles.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.6.p27">3. Both scientific research and artistic
representation must be guided by a sound moral and religious, that is,
a truly Christian spirit. The secular historian should be filled with
universal human sympathy, the church historian with universal Christian
sympathy. The motto of the former is: "Homo sum, nihil humani a me alienum
puto;" the motto of
the latter: "Christianus sum, nihil Christiani a me alienum
puto."</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.6.p28">The historian must first lay aside all prejudice
and party zeal, and proceed in the pure love of truth. Not that he must
become a tabula rasa. No man is able, or should attempt, to cast off
the educational influences which have made him what he is. But the
historian of the church of Christ must in every thing be as true as
possible to the objective fact, "sine ira et studio;" do justice to every person and
event; and stand in the centre of Christianity, whence he may see all
points in the circumference, all individual persons and events, all
confessions, denominations, and sects, in their true relations to each
other and to the glorious whole. The famous threefold test of catholic
truth—universality of time (semper), place (ubique), and number (ab omnibus)—in its literal sense,
is indeed untrue and inapplicable. Nevertheless, there is a common
Christianity in the Church, as well as a common humanity in the world,
which no Christian can disregard with impunity. Christ is the divine
harmony of all the discordant human creeds and sects. It is the duty
and the privilege of the historian to trace the image of Christ in the
various physiognomies of his disciples, and to act as a mediator
between the different sections of his kingdom.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.6.p29">Then he must be in thorough sympathy with his
subject, and enthusiastically devoted thereto. As no one can interpret
a poet without poetic feeling and taste, or a philosopher without
speculative talent, so no one can rightly comprehend and exhibit the
history of Christianity without a Christian spirit. An unbeliever could
produce only a repulsive caricature, or at best a lifeless statue. The
higher the historian stands on Christian ground, the larger is his
horizon, and the more full and clear his view of single regions below,
and of their mutual bearings. Even error can be fairly seen only from
the position of truth. "Verum est index sui et falsi." Christianity is the absolute
truth, which, like the sun, both reveals itself and enlightens all that
is dark. Church history, like the Bible, is its own best
interpreter.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.6.p30">So far as the historian combines these three
qualifications, he fulfils his office. In this life we can, of course,
only distantly approach perfection in this or in any other branch of
study. Absolute success would require infallibility; and this is denied
to mortal man. It is the exclusive privilege of the Divine mind to see
the end from the beginning, and to view events from all sides and in
all their bearings; while the human mind can only take up things
consecutively and view them partially or in fragments.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.6.p31">The full solution of the mysteries of history is
reserved for that heavenly state, when we shall see no longer through a
gloss darkly, but face to face, and shall survey the developments of
time from the heights of eternity. What St. Augustine so aptly says of
the mutual relation of the Old and New Testament, "Novum Testamentum in Vetere
latet, Vetus in Novo patet," may be applied also to the
relation of this world and the world to come. The history of the church
militant is but a type and a prophecy of the triumphant kingdom of God
in heaven—a prophecy which will be perfectly
understood only in the light of its fulfilment.</p>

</div>


<div type="x-div3" divTitle="Literature of Church History" n="7" osisID="i.v.7">

<p subType="x-c25" osisID="i.v.7.p1">§ 7. Literature of
Church History.</p>

<p osisID="i.v.7.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-c26" osisID="i.v.7.p3"><name osisID="i.v.7.p3.1">Stäudlin</name>: <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p3.3">Geschichte u. Literatur der K. Geschichte. Hann.
1827.</reference></p>

<p subType="x-c26" osisID="i.v.7.p4"><name osisID="i.v.7.p4.1">J. G. Dowling</name>: <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p4.3">An Introduction to the
Critical Study of Eccles. History. London, 1838. Quoted p. 1. The work
is chiefly an account of the ecclesiastical historians. pp.
1–212.</reference></p>

<p subType="x-c26" osisID="i.v.7.p5"><name osisID="i.v.7.p5.1">F. C. Baur</name>: <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p5.3">Die Epochen der kirchlichen
Geschichtschreibung. Tüb. 1852.</reference></p>

<p subType="x-c26" osisID="i.v.7.p6"><name osisID="i.v.7.p6.1">Philip Schaff</name>: <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p6.3">Introduction to History of
the Apost. Church (N. York, 1853), pp.
51–134.</reference></p>

<p subType="x-c26" osisID="i.v.7.p7"><name osisID="i.v.7.p7.1">Engelhardt</name>: <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p7.3">Uebersicht der
kirchengeschichtlichen Literatur vom Jahre 1825–1850.
In Niedner’s "Zeitschrift für historische
Theologie," 1851.</reference></p>

<p subType="x-c26" osisID="i.v.7.p8"><name osisID="i.v.7.p8.1">G. Uhlhorn</name>: <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p8.3">Die kirchenhist. Arbeiten von
1851–1860. In Niedner’s "Zeitschrift
für histor. Theologie," for 1866, Gotha, pp.
3–160. The same: Die ältere Kirchengesch.
in ihren neueren Darstellungen. In "Jahrbücher
für deutsche Theol." Vol. II. 648 sqq.</reference></p>

<p subType="x-c26" osisID="i.v.7.p9"><name osisID="i.v.7.p9.1">Brieger</name>’s <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p9.3">"Zeitschrift
für Kirchengeschichte" (begun in 1877 and published in
Gotha) contains bibliographical articles of Ad. Harnack,
Möller, and others, on the latest literature.</reference></p>

<p subType="x-c26" osisID="i.v.7.p10"><name osisID="i.v.7.p10.1">Ch. K. Adams</name>: <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p10.3">A Manual of Historical
Literature. N. York, 3d ed. 1888.</reference></p>

<p osisID="i.v.7.p11"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PFirst" osisID="i.v.7.p12">Like every other science and art, church
historiography has a history of development toward its true perfection.
This history exhibits not only a continual growth of material, but also
a gradual, though sometimes long interrupted, improvement of method,
from the mere collection of names and dates in a Christian chronicle,
to critical research and discrimination, pragmatic reference to causes
and motives, scientific command of material, philosophical
generalization, and artistic reproduction of the actual history itself.
In this progress also are marked the various confessional and
denominational phases of Christianity, giving different points of view,
and consequently different conceptions and representations of the
several periods and divisions of Christendom; so that the development
of the Church itself is mirrored in the development of church
historiography.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p13">We can here do no more than mention the leading
works which mark the successive epochs in the growth of our
science.</p>

<p osisID="i.v.7.p14"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p15">I. The Apostolic
Church.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p16">The first works on church history are the
canonical Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and
John, the inspired biographical memoirs of Jesus Christ, who is
the theanthropic head of the Church universal.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p17">These are followed by Luke’s Acts of the Apostles, which
describes the planting of Christianity among Jews and Gentiles from
Jerusalem to Rome, by the labors of the apostles, especially Peter and
Paul.</p>

<p osisID="i.v.7.p18"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p19">II. The Greek Church
historians.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p20">The first post-apostolic works on church history,
as indeed all branches of theological literature, take their rise in
the Greek Church.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p21"><name osisID="i.v.7.p21.1">Eusebius</name>, bishop of
Caesarea, in Palestine, and contemporary with Constantine the Great,
composed a church history in ten books (ejkklhsiastikh;
iJstoriva, from the incarnation of the Logos to the year 324),
by which he has won the title of the Father of church history, or the
Christian Herodotus. Though by no means very critical and discerning,
and far inferior in literary talent and execution to the works of the
great classical historians, this ante-Nicene church history is
invaluable for its learning, moderation, and love of truth; for its use
of so since totally or partially lost; and for its interesting position
of personal observation between the last persecutions of the church and
her establishment in the Byzantine empire.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p22">Eusebius was followed in similar spirit and on the
same plan by <name osisID="i.v.7.p22.1">Socrates</name>, <name osisID="i.v.7.p22.3">Sozomen</name>,
and <name osisID="i.v.7.p22.5">Theodoret</name> in the
fifth century, and <name osisID="i.v.7.p22.7">Theodorus</name> and <name osisID="i.v.7.p22.9">Evagrius</name> in the sixth,
each taking up the thread of the narrative where his predecessor had
dropped it, and covering in part the same ground, from <name osisID="i.v.7.p22.10">Constantine the Great</name> till toward the middle of the fifth
century.<note osisID="edn7"><p osisID="i.v.7.p23"/>

<p osisID="i.v.7.p24">6 These Greek historians have been best edited by Henri de
Valois (Valesius), in Greek and Latin with notes, in 3 folios, Paris,
1659-73; also Amsterd., 1695, and, with additional notes by W. Reading,
Cambridge, 1720. Eusebius has been often separately published in
several languages.</p></note></p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p25">Of the later Greek historians, from the seventh
century, to the fifteenth, the "Scriptores Byzantini," as they are
called, <name osisID="i.v.7.p25.1">Nicephorus Callisti</name> (son of
Callistus, about a.d. 1333) deserves special
regard. His Ecclesiastical History was written with the use of the
large library of the church of St. Sophia in Constantinople, and
dedicated to the emperor <name osisID="i.v.7.p25.3">Andronicus
Palaeologus</name> (d. 1327). It extends in eighteen books (each of
which begins with a letter of his name) from the birth of Christ to the
death of <name osisID="i.v.7.p25.4">Phocas</name>, a.d. 610, and gives in the preface a summary of five books
more, which would have brought it down to 911. He was an industrious
and eloquent, but uncritical and superstitious writer.<note osisID="edn8"><p osisID="i.v.7.p26"> Νικηφόρου
Καλλίστου
του̑
Ξανθοπούλου
̓Εκκλησιαστικη̑ς
ἱς τορίας
Βιβλία ιή.
Edited by the Jesuit, Fronton le Duc
(Fronto-Ducaeus), Par. 1630, 2 fol. This is the only Greek edition from
the only extant MS., which belonged to the King of Hungary, then came
into the possession of the Turks, and last into the imperial library of
Vienna. But a Latin version by John Lang waspublished at Basle as early
as 1561.</p></note></p>

<p osisID="i.v.7.p27"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p28">III. Latin Church
historians of the middle ages.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p29">The Latin Church, before the Reformation, was, in
church history, as in all other theological studies, at first wholly
dependent on the Greek, and long content with mere translations and
extracts from Eusebius and his continuators.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p30">The most popular of these was the <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p30.1">Historia Tripartita</reference>, composed by <name osisID="i.v.7.p30.2">Cassiodorus</name>, prime minister of <name osisID="i.v.7.p30.3">Theodoric</name>, and afterwards abbot of a convent in Calabria
(d. about a.d. 562). It is a compilation from
the histories of <name osisID="i.v.7.p30.5">Socrates</name>, <name osisID="i.v.7.p30.6">Sozomen</name>, and <name osisID="i.v.7.p30.7">Theodoret</name>,
abridging and harmonizing them, and supplied—together
with the translation of Eusebius by <name osisID="i.v.7.p30.8">Rufinus</name>—the West for several centuries
with its knowledge of the fortunes of the ancient church.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p31">The middle age produced no general church history
of consequence, but a host of chronicles, and histories of particular
nations, monastic orders, eminent popes, bishops, missionaries, saints,
etc. Though rarely worth much as compositions, these are yet of great
value as material, after a careful sifting of truth from legendary
fiction.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p32">The principal mediaeval historians are <name osisID="i.v.7.p32.1">Gregory of Tours</name> (d. 595), who
wrote a church history of the Franks; <name osisID="i.v.7.p32.3">the
Venerable Bede</name>, (d. 735), the father of
English church history; <name osisID="i.v.7.p32.5">Paulus
Diaconus</name> (d. 799), the historian of the
Lombards; <name osisID="i.v.7.p32.7">Adam of Bremen</name>, the chief
authority for Scandinavian church history from a.d. 788–1072; <name osisID="i.v.7.p32.9">Haimo</name> (or Haymo, Aimo, a monk of Fulda, afterwards bishop
of Halberstadt, d. 853), who described in ten books, mostly from
Rufinus, the history of the first four centuries (<reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p32.10">Hist oriae Sacrae Epitome</reference>); <name osisID="i.v.7.p32.11">Anastasius</name> (about 872), the author in part of the <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p32.12">Liber Pontificalis</reference>, i.e., biographies of
the Popes till Stephen VI. (who died 891); <name osisID="i.v.7.p32.13">Bartholomaeus of Lucca</name>. (about 1312), who composed a
general church history from Christ to a.d.
1312; St. <name osisID="i.v.7.p32.16">Antoninus</name>
(Antonio Pierozzi), archbishop of Florence (d. 1459), the author of the
largest mediaeval work on secular and sacred history (<reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p32.17">Summa Historialis</reference>), from the creation to a.d. 1457.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p33">Historical criticism began with the revival of
letters, and revealed itself first in the doubts of <name osisID="i.v.7.p33.1">Laurentius Valla</name> (d. 1457) and <name osisID="i.v.7.p33.2">Nicolaus of Cusa</name> (d. 1464) concerning the genuineness of
the donation of Constantine, the Isidorian Decretals, and other
spurious documents, which are now as universally rejected as they were
once universally accepted.</p>

<p osisID="i.v.7.p34"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p35">IV. Roman Catholic
historians.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p36">The Roman Catholic Church was roused by the shock
of the Reformation, in the sixteenth century, to great activity in this
and other departments of theology, and produced some works of immense
learning and antiquarian research, but generally characterized rather
by zeal for the papacy, and against Protestantism, than by the purely
historical spirit. Her best historians are either Italians, and
ultramontane in spirit, or Frenchmen, mostly on the side of the more
liberal but less consistent Gallicanism.</p>

<p osisID="i.v.7.p37"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p38">(a) Italians:</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p39">First stands the Cardinal <name osisID="i.v.7.p39.1">Caesar Baronius</name> (d. 1607), with his <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p39.2">Annales Ecclesiastici</reference>(<reference type="scripRef" osisID="i.v.7.p39.3" osisRef="Bible:Rom.1588">Rom. 1588</reference> sqq.), in 12 folio
volumes, on which he spent thirty years of unwearied study. They come
down only to the year 1198, but are continued by <name osisID="i.v.7.p39.4">Raynaldi</name> (to 1565), <name osisID="i.v.7.p39.6">Laderchi</name> (to 1571), and <name osisID="i.v.7.p39.8">Theiner</name> (to 1584).<note osisID="edn9"><p osisID="i.v.7.p40"> We omit the inferior
continuations of the Polish Dominican, Abr.
Bzovius, from 1198 to 1565, in 8 vols., and of
Henr. Spondé, bishop of Pamiers,
from 1197 to 1647, 2 vols. The best of the older editions, including
the continuation of Raynaldi (but not of Laderchi) and the learned
criticisms of Pagi and his nephew, was arranged by Archbishop Mansi, in 88 folios, Lucca, 1738-57. A hundred years
later, a German scholar in Rome, Augustin
Theiner, prefect of the Vatican Archives, resumed the
continuation in 3 vols., embracing the pontificate of Gregory XIII.
(a.d. 1572-’84), Rome and
Paris, 1856, 3 vols fol, and hoped to bring the history down to the
pontificate of Pius VII., a.d. 1800, in 12 folios; but he interrupted the
continuation, and began, in 1864, a new edition of the whole work
(including Raynaldi and Laderchi), which is to be completed in 45 or 50
volumes, at Bar-le-Duc, France. Theiner was first a liberal Catholic,
then an Ultramontanist, last an Old Catholic (in correspondence with
Döllinger), excluded from the Vatican (1870), but pardoned
by the pope, and died suddenly, 1874. His older brother, Johann Anton,
became a Protestant.</p></note></p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p41">This truly colossal and monumental work is even to
this day an invaluable storehouse of information from the Vatican
library and other archives, and will always be consulted by
professional scholars. It is written in dry, ever broken, unreadable
style, and contains many spurious documents. It stands wholly on the
ground of absolute papacy, and is designed as a positive refutation of
the Magdeburg Centuries, though it does not condescend directly to
notice them. It gave immense aid and comfort to the cause of Romanism,
and was often epitomized and popularized in several languages. But it
was also severely criticized, and in part refuted, not only by such
Protestants as <name osisID="i.v.7.p41.1">Casaubon</name>, <name osisID="i.v.7.p41.2">Spanheim</name>, and <name osisID="i.v.7.p41.3">Samuel Basnage</name>,
but by Roman Catholic scholars also, especially two French Franciscans,
<name osisID="i.v.7.p41.4">Antoine</name> and <name osisID="i.v.7.p41.5">François Pagi</name>, who corrected the
chronology.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p42">Far less known and used than the Annals of
Baronius is the <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p42.1">Historia Ecclesiastica</reference>of
<name osisID="i.v.7.p42.2">Caspar Sacharelli</name>, which comes down to a.d. 1185, and was published in Rome,
1771–1796, in 25 quarto volumes.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p43">Invaluable contributions to historical collections
and special researches have been made by other Italian scholars, as
<name osisID="i.v.7.p43.1">Muratori</name>, <name osisID="i.v.7.p43.3">Zaccagni</name>, <name osisID="i.v.7.p43.5">Zaccaria</name>, <name osisID="i.v.7.p43.7">Mansi</name>, <name osisID="i.v.7.p43.9">Gallandi</name>, <name osisID="i.v.7.p43.11">Paolo Sarpi</name>, <name osisID="i.v.7.p43.13">Pallavicini</name> (the last two on the
Council of Trent), <name osisID="i.v.7.p43.15">the three
Assemani</name>, and <name osisID="i.v.7.p43.17">Angelo
Mai</name>.</p>

<p osisID="i.v.7.p44"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p45">(b) French Catholic historians.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p46"><name osisID="i.v.7.p46.1">Natalis (Noel)
Alexander</name>, Professor and Provincial of the Dominican order (d.
1724), wrote his <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p46.2">Historia Ecclesiastica Veteris
et Nova Testamenti</reference>to the year 1600 (Paris, 1676, 2d ed. 1699
sqq. 8 vols. fol.) in the spirit of Gallicanism, with great learning,
but in dry scholastic style. <name osisID="i.v.7.p46.3">Innocent XI</name>. put
it in the Index (1684). This gave rise to the corrected editions.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p47">The abbot <name osisID="i.v.7.p47.1">Claude Fleury</name>
(d. 1723), in his <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p47.2">Histoire
ecclésiastique</reference>(Par. 1691–1720, in 20
vols. quarto, down to a.d. 1414, continued by
<name osisID="i.v.7.p47.4">Claude Fabre</name>, a very decided Gallican, to
a.d. 1595), furnished a much more popular
work, commended by mildness of spirit and fluency of style, and as
useful for edification as for instruction. It is a minute and, upon the
whole, accurate narrative of the course of events as they occurred, but
without system and philosophical generalization, and hence tedious and
wearisome. When <name osisID="i.v.7.p47.6">Fleury</name> was asked why he
unnecessarily darkened his pages with so many discreditable facts, he
properly replied that the survival and progress of Christianity,
notwithstanding the vices and crimes of its professors and preachers,
was the best proof of its divine origin.<note osisID="edn10"><p osisID="i.v.7.p48"> A portion
of Fleury’s History, from the second
oecumenical Council to the end of the fourth century (a.d. 381-400), was published in English at Oxford, 1842,
in three volumes, on the basis of Herbert’s
translation (London, 1728), carefully revised by John H Newman, who was
at that time the theological leader of the Oxford Tractarian movement,
and subsequently (1879) became a cardinal in the Roman Catholic
Church.</p></note></p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p49"><name osisID="i.v.7.p49.1">Jacques Bénigne
Bossuet</name>, the distinguished bishop of Meaux (d. 1704), an
advocate of Romanism on the one hand against Protestantism, but of
Gallicanism on the other against Ultramontanism, wrote with brilliant
eloquence, and in the spirit of the Catholic church, a universal
history, in bold outlines for popular effect.<note osisID="edn11"><p osisID="i.v.7.p50"> Discours sur
l’histoire universelle depuis le commencement du monde
jusgu’à l’empire de
Charlemagne. Paris, 1681, and other
editions.</p></note> This was continued in the
German language by the Protestant Cramer, with less elegance but more
thoroughness, and with special reference to the doctrine history of the
middle age.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p51"><name osisID="i.v.7.p51.1">Sebastien le Nain de
Tillemont</name> (d. 1698), a French nobleman and priest, without
office and devoted exclusively to study and prayer—a
pupil and friend of the Jansenists and in partial sympathy with
Gallicanism—composed a most learned and useful history
of the first six centuries (till 513), in a series of minute
biographies, with great skill and conscientiousness, almost entirely in
the words of the original authorities, from which he carefully
distinguishes his own additions. It is, as far as it goes, the most
valuable church history produced by Roman Catholic industry and
learning.<note osisID="edn12"><p osisID="i.v.7.p52"> Mémoires
pour servir à l’histoire
ecclésiastique des six premiers siècles,
justifiés par les citations des auteurs
originaux. Paris, 1693-1712, 16 vols.
quarto. Reprinted at Venice, 1732 sqq. His Histoire des empereurs, Paris,
1690-1738, in 6 vols., gives the secular history down to emperor
Anastasius.</p></note></p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p53">Contemporaneously with Tillemont, the Gallican,
<name osisID="i.v.7.p53.1">L. Ellies Dupin</name> (d. 1719), furnished a
biographical and bibliographical church history down to the seventeenth
century.<note osisID="edn13"><p osisID="i.v.7.p54"> Under the title: Nouvelle Bibliothèque des auteurs
ecclésastiques, contenant l’Histoire de
leur vie, le catalogue, la critique et la chronologie de leurs
ouvrages. Paris and Amsterdam, 1693-1715,
19 vols.; 9th ed., Par., 1698 aqq., with the continuations of Goujet,
Petit-Didier, to the 18th cent., and the critique of R. Simon, 61 vols.
The work was condemned by Rome for its free criticism of the
fathers.</p></note> <name osisID="i.v.7.p54.4">Remi Ceillier</name> (d.
1761) followed with a similar work, which has the advantage of greater
completeness and accuracy.<note osisID="edn14"><p osisID="i.v.7.p55"> Histoire
générale des auteurs sacrés et
ecclésaistiques. Paris,
1729-’63 in 23 vols. 4to. New ed. begun
1858.</p></note> The French Benedictines of the congregation of
St. Maur, in the seventeenth and eighteenth century, did immense
service to historical theology by the best critical editions of the
fathers and extensive archaeological works. We can only mention the
names of <name osisID="i.v.7.p55.3">Mabillon</name>,
<name osisID="i.v.7.p55.5">Massuet</name>, <name osisID="i.v.7.p55.7">Montfaucon</name>, <name osisID="i.v.7.p55.9">D’achery</name>, <name osisID="i.v.7.p55.11">Ruinart</name>, <name osisID="i.v.7.p55.13">Martène</name>, <name osisID="i.v.7.p55.15">Durand</name>. Among the Jesuits, <name osisID="i.v.7.p55.17">Sirmond</name> and <name osisID="i.v.7.p55.19">Petau</name> occupy a prominent place.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p56">The Abbé <name osisID="i.v.7.p56.1">Rohrbacher</name>. (Professor of Church History at Nancy, d.
1856) wrote an extensive <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p56.2">Universal History of
the Church</reference>, including that of the Old Testament, down to 1848.
It is less liberal than the great Gallican writers of the seventeenth
century, but shows familiarity with German literature.<note osisID="edn15"><p osisID="i.v.7.p57"> Histoire
universelle de l’église
catholique. Nancy and Paris,
1842-’49; 3d ed., 1856-’6l, in 29
vols. oct.; 4th ed. by Chantral, 1864 sqq. A German translation by
Hülskamp, Rump and others appeared at Münster, 1860
sqq.</p></note></p>

<p osisID="i.v.7.p58"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p59">(c) German Catholic historians.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p60">The pioneer of modern German Catholic historians
of note is a poet and an ex-Protestant, Count <name osisID="i.v.7.p60.1">Leopold Von Stolberg</name> (d. 1819). With the enthusiasm of an
honest, noble, and devout, but credulous convert, he began, in 1806, a
very full <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p60.2">Geschichte der Religion Jesu
Christi</reference>, and brought it down in 15
volumes to the year 430. It was continued by <name osisID="i.v.7.p60.4">F.
Kerz</name> (vols. 16–45, to a.d. 1192) and <name osisID="i.v.7.p60.6">J. N. Brischar</name>
(vols. 45–53, to a.d.
1245).</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p61"><name osisID="i.v.7.p61.1">Theod. Katerkamp</name> (d. at
Münster, 1834) wrote a church history, in the same spirit
and pleasing style, down to a.d. 1153.<note osisID="edn16"><p osisID="i.v.7.p62"> Münster,
1819-’34, 5 vols 8vo.</p></note> It
remained unfinished, like the work of <name osisID="i.v.7.p62.2">Locherer</name>(d. 1837), which extends to 1073.<note osisID="edn17"><p osisID="i.v.7.p63"> Ravensburg, 1824 sqq., 9
vols</p></note></p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p64">Bishop <name osisID="i.v.7.p64.1">Hefele</name>’s <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p64.3">History
of the Councils</reference>(Conciliengeschichte,
1855–’86; revised edition and
continuation, 1873 sqq.) is a most valuable contribution to the history
of doctrine and discipline down to the Council of Trent.<note osisID="edn18"><p osisID="i.v.7.p65"> The first two volumes of the
first ed. were translated by W. R. Clark and H. N.
Oxenham, and published by T. &amp; T. Clark, Edinburgh, 1871 and
1876.</p></note></p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p66">The best compendious histories from the pens of
German Romanists are produced by <name osisID="i.v.7.p66.1">Jos. Ign.
Ritter</name>, Professor in Bonn and afterward in Breslau (d. 1857);<note osisID="edn19"><p osisID="i.v.7.p67"> Handbuch der K
G. Bonn, 3d ed., 1846; 6th ed., 1862, 2
vols.</p></note> <name osisID="i.v.7.p67.3">Joh. Adam Möhler</name>, formerly Professor in
Tübingen, and then in Munich, the author of the famous <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p67.4">Symbolik</reference>(d. 1838);<note osisID="edn20"><p osisID="i.v.7.p68"> His
Kirchengeschichte was published from his
lectures by Pius Boniface Gams. Regensburg,
1867-’68, in 3 vols. It is very unequal and lacks the
author’s own finish. We have from Möhler
also a monograph on Athanius (1827), and a Patrologie
(covering the first three centuries, and published after his death,
1840).</p></note> <name osisID="i.v.7.p68.4">Joh.
Alzog</name> (d. 1878);<note osisID="edn21"><p osisID="i.v.7.p69"> Handbuch der
Universal-Kirchengeschichte. 9th ed.,
Mainz, 1872, 2 vols.; 10th ed., 1882. Alzog aims to be the Roman
Catholic Hase as to brevity and condensation. A French translation from
the 5th ed. was prepared by Goeschler and
Audley, 1849 (4th ed. by Abbé
Sabatier, 1874); an English translation by F. J. Pabisch and Thos. Byrne, Cincinnati, O., 1874 sqq., in 3 vols. The Am.
translators censure the French translators for the liberties they have
taken with Alzog, but they have taken similar liberties, and, by sundry
additions, made the author more Romish than he was.</p></note> <name osisID="i.v.7.p69.8">H. Brück</name>
(Mayence, 2d ed., 1877); <name osisID="i.v.7.p69.10">F.
X. Kraus</name> (Treves, 1873; 3d ed., 1882);
<name osisID="i.v.7.p69.12">Card. Hergenröther</name>(Freiburg, 3d ed., 1886, 3 vols.); <name osisID="i.v.7.p69.14">F.
X. Funk</name> (Tübingen, 1886; 2d ed., 1890).</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p70"><name osisID="i.v.7.p70.1">A. F. Gfrörer</name>
(d. 1861) began his learned <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p70.2">General Church
History</reference> as a Protestant, or rather as a Rationalist
(1841–’46, 4 vols., till a.d. 1056), and continued it from Gregory VII. on as a
Romanist (1859–’61).</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p71"><name osisID="i.v.7.p71.1">Dr. John Joseph Ignatius
Döllinger</name> (Professor in Munich, born 1799), the most
learned historian of the Roman Church in the nineteenth century,
represents the opposite course from popery to anti-popery. He began,
but never finished, a <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p71.2">Handbook of Christian
Church History</reference>(Landshut, 1833, 2 vols.) till a.d. 680, and a <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p71.4">Manual of Church
History</reference>(1836, 2d ed., 1843, 2 vols.) to the fifteenth century,
and in part to 1517.<note osisID="edn22"><p osisID="i.v.7.p72"> English translation by Dr.
Edw. Cox, Lond. 1840-’42, in 4 vols. This
combines Döllinger’s Handbuch and
Lehrbuch as
far as they supplement each other.</p></note> He wrote also learned works against the
Reformation (<reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p72.6">Die Reformation</reference>, 1846–’48, in 3
vols.), on Hippolytus and Callistus (1853), on the preparation
for Christianity (Heidenthum u Judenthum,
1857), <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p72.9">Christianity and the Church in the time
of its Founding</reference> (1860), <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p72.10">The Church
and the Churches</reference> (1862), <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p72.11">Papal
Fables of the Middle Age</reference> (1865), <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p72.12">The Pope and the Council</reference> (under the assumed name of
"Janus," 1869), etc.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p73">During the Vatican Council in 1870
Döllinger broke with Rome, became the theological leader of
the Old Catholic recession, and was excommunicated by the Archbishop of
Munich (his former pupil), April 17, 1871, as being guilty of "the
crime of open and formal heresy." He knows too much of church history
to believe in the infallibility of the pope. He solemnly declared
(March 28, 1871) that "as a Christian, as a theologian, as a historian,
and as a citizen," he could not accept the Vatican decrees, because
they contradict the spirit of the gospel and the genuine tradition of
the church, and, if carried out, must involve church and state, the
clergy and the laity, in irreconcilable conflict.<note osisID="edn23"><p osisID="i.v.7.p74"> See Schaff’s
Creeds of Christendom, Vol. I., 195 sq.; Von Schulte:
Der Altkatholicismus (Giessen, 1887), 109 sqq.</p></note></p>

<p osisID="i.v.7.p75"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p76">V. The Protestant Church
historians.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p77">The Reformation of the sixteenth century is the
mother church history as a science and art in the proper sense of term.
It seemed at first to break off from the past and to depreciate church
history, by going back directly to the Bible as the only rule of faith
and practice, and especially to look most unfavorably on the Catholic
middle age, as a progressive corruption of the apostolic doctrine and
discipline. But, on the other hand, it exalted primitive Christianity,
and awakened a new and enthusiastic interest in all the documents of
the apostolic church, with an energetic effort to reproduce its spirit
and institutions. It really repudiated only the later tradition in
favor of the older, taking its stand upon the primitive historical
basis of Christianity. Then again, in the course of controversy with
Rome, Protestantism found it desirable and necessary to wrest from its
opponent not only the scriptural argument, but also the historical, and
to turn it as far as possible to the side of the evangelical cause. For
the Protestants could never deny that the true Church of Christ is
built on a rock, and has the promise of indestructible permanence.
Finally, the Reformation, by, liberating the mind from the yoke of a
despotic ecclesiastical authority, gave an entirely new impulse,
directly or indirectly to free investigation in every department, and
produced that historical criticism which claims to clear fact from the
accretions of fiction, and to bring out the truth, the whole truth, and
nothing but the truth, of history. Of course this criticism may run to
the extreme of rationalism and scepticism, which oppose the authority
of the apostles and of Christ himself; as it actually did for a time,
especially in Germany. But the abuse of free investigation proves
nothing against the right use of it; and is to be regarded only as a
temporary aberration, from which all sound minds will return to a due
appreciation of history, as a truly rational unfolding of the plan of
redemption, and a standing witness for the all-ruling providence of
God, and the divine character of the Christian religion.</p>

<p osisID="i.v.7.p78"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p79">(a) German, Swiss, and Dutch historians.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p80">Protestant church historiography has thus far
flourished most on German soil. A patient and painstaking industry and
conscientious love of truth and justice qualify German scholars for the
mining operations of research which bring forth the raw material for
the manufacturer; while French and English historians know best how to
utilize and popularize the material for the general reader.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p81">The following are the principal works:</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p82"><name osisID="i.v.7.p82.1">Matthias Flacius</name> (d 1575), surnamed Illyricus, a zealous Lutheran,
and an unsparing enemy of Papists, Calvinists, and Melancthonians,
heads the list of Protestant historians with his great <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p82.3">Eccelesiastica Historia Novi Testamenti, commonly called
Centuriae Magdeburgenses</reference>(Basle,
1560–’74), covering thirteen
centuries of the Christian era in as many folio volumes. He began the
work in Magdeburg, in connection with ten other, scholars of like
Spirit and zeal, and in the face of innumerable difficulties, for the
purpose of exposing the corruptions and, errors of the papacy, and of
proving the doctrines of the Lutheran Reformation orthodox by the
"witnesses of the truth" in all ages. The tone is therefore
controversial throughout, and quite as partial as that of the Annals of
Baronius on the papal side. The style is tasteless and repulsive, but
the amount of persevering labor, the immense, though ill-digested and
unwieldy mass of material, and the boldness of the criticism, are
imposing and astonishing. The "Centuries" broke the path of free
historical study, and are the first general church history deserving of
the name. They introduced also a new method. They divide the material
by centuries, and each century by a uniform Procrustean scheme of not
less than sixteen rubrics: "de loco et propagatione ecclesiae; de persecutione
et tranquillitate ecclesiae; de doctrina; de haeresibus; de ceremoniis;
de politia; de schismatibus; de conciliis; de vitis episcoporum; de
haereticis; de martyribus; de miraculis et prodigiis; de rebus
Judaicis; de aliis religionibus; de mutationibus politicis." This plan destroys all symmetry, and
occasions wearisome diffuseness and repetition. Yet, in spite of its
mechanical uniformity and stiffness, it is more scientific than the
annalistic or chronicle method, and, with material improvements and
considerable curtailment of rubrics, it has been followed to this
day.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p83">The Swiss, <name osisID="i.v.7.p83.1">J. H.
Hottinger</name> (d. 1667), in his <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p83.2">Historia
Ecclesiastica N. Testamenti</reference>(Zurich,
1655–’67, 9 vols. fol.), furnished a
Reformed counterpart to the Magdeburg Centuries. It is less original
and vigorous, but more sober and moderate. It comes down to the
sixteenth century, to which alone five volumes are devoted.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p84">From <name osisID="i.v.7.p84.1">Fred. Spanheim</name> of
Holland (d. 1649) we have a <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p84.2">Summa Historia
Ecclesiasticae</reference> (Lugd. Bat. 1689), coming down to the sixteenth
century. It is based on a thorough and critical knowledge of the
sources, and serves at the same time as a refutation of Baronius.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p85">A new path was broken by <name osisID="i.v.7.p85.1">Gottfried Arnold</name> (d. 1714), in his, <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p85.2">Impartial History of the Church and Heretics</reference>to a.d. 1688.<note osisID="edn24"><p osisID="i.v.7.p86"> UnpartheiischeKirchen- und Ketzerhistorie. Frankfurt, 1699 sqq. 4 vol. fol.</p></note> He is the historian of the pietistic and
mystic school. He made subjective piety the test of the true faith, and
the persecuted sects the main channel of true Christianity; while the
reigning church from Constantine down, and indeed not the Catholic
church only, but the orthodox Lutheran with it, he represented as a
progressive apostasy, a Babylon full of corruption and abomination. In
this way he boldly and effectually broke down the walls of
ecclesiastical exclusiveness and bigotry; but at the same time, without
intending or suspecting it, he opened the way to a rationalistic and
sceptical treatment of history. While, in his zeal for impartiality and
personal piety, he endeavored to do justice to all possible heretics
and sectaries, he did great injustice to the supporters of orthodoxy
and ecclesiastical order. Arnold was also the first to use the German
language instead of the Latin in learned history; but his style is
tasteless and insipid.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p87"><name osisID="i.v.7.p87.1">J. L. von Mosheim</name>
(Chancellor of the University at Göttingen, d. 1755), a
moderate and impartial Lutheran, is the father of church historiography
as an art, unless we prefer to concede this merit to Bossuet. In
skilful construction, clear, though mechanical and monotonous
arrangement, critical sagacity, pragmatic combination, freedom from
passion, almost bordering on cool indifferentism, and in easy elegance
of Latin style, he surpasses all his predecessors. His well-known <reference type="x-citation" osisID="i.v.7.p87.2">Institutiones Historiae Ecclesiasticae antiquae et
recentioris</reference>(Helmstädt, 1755) follows the centurial
plan of Flacius, but in simpler form, and, as translated and
supplemented by Maclaine, and Murdock, is still used extensively as a
text-book in England and America.<note osisID="edn25"><p osisID="i.v.7.p88"> Best edition: Institutes of
Ecclesiastical History ancient and modern, by John Lawrence von Mosheim. A new and literal
translation from the original Latin, with copious additional
Notes, original and selected. By James Murdock, D. D. 1832;
5th ed., New York. 1854, 3 vols. Murdock was Professor of
Ecclesiastical History at Andover, Mass. (d. 1856), and translated also
Münscher’s Dogmengeschichte. Mosheim’s special history of the ante-Nicene
period (1733) was translated from the Latin by Vidal (1813), and
Murdock (1851), new ed., N. York, 1853, 2 vols.</p></note></p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="i.v.7.p89"><name osisID="i.v.7.p89.1">J. M.
Schröckh</name> (d. 1808), a pupil of Mosheim, but already
touched with the neological spirit which Semler (d. 1791) introduced
into the historical theology of Germany, wrote with unwearied industry
the largest Protestant church history after the Magdeburg Centuries. He
very properly forsook the centurial plan still followed by Mosheim, and
adopted the periodic. His Christian Church History comprises
forty-five volumes, and reaches to the end of the eighteenth century.
It is written in diffuse but clear and easy style, with reliable
knowledge of